Contest 42CS : the bluewater Stradivarius. Complete Sea Trial

The Contest 42CS is the  smallest boat of the amazing range of sailing yachts built by Contest Yachts, the historic Dutch shipyard that, for almost 60 years, has been manufacturing what are probably among the best sailing yachts in the world.

To fully understand such a big statement, that we cannot refrain from justifying, we must must be able to explain you the reasons why.

When assessing a sailboat, you should never overlook its construction, the way it sails and, last but not least, the capacity of the shipyard to design yachts that can make your heart beat at first glance.

Contest Yachts builds sailing boats that, without exception, meet, by excelling, all these three essential features. If we wanted to take a deeper look and add a fourth one, that is the capacity to keep value over time, we would find out that used boats of this brand stay on the market only for a short time and always benefit from very high ratings.

After all, this is not surprising if we consider that the boat we have tested is 4 years old and, both in the port and at sea, it has never made any crunches and has no imperfections at all, even if you try to find them with a magnifying glass.

You can therefore fully understand how anxious I was to climb on board this “Stradivarius of the sea”.

Contest 42CS Sea Trial

To sail in the North-East Atlantic is a bit like attending the university of the sea since large tidal ranges and scarcely clement climate put both, boats and skippers, through the mill. Yet, even if it’s late November, it’s shaping up to be a nice day, maybe more Mediterranean than Dutch.

Sure, temperature is low – about 3-4 degrees – but the large hood of the Contest offers a more than sufficient shelter in order not to feel too much cold.

The engine of the Contest 42CS is barely audible while, slowly motoring, we approach the sluice of the dam that, recovering two meters of drop, will lead us to the sea-level basin.

Our boat manouvre with ease, we get close to the quay, we take lines and, while we wait the level to rise, I start analyzing the deck plan that, as with all Contest boats, is the result of the personalized customization required by the owner.

In this case, the boat is rigged with a carbon mast, in-boom furling mainsail, carbon boom and a mainsail sheet circuit that goes directly to a cockpit-mounted central winch.

More and more frequent on maxi yachts, this solution, when applied to boats of this size, combines sporty performances and extraordinary easy handling.

A low-overlapping jib, hydraulic vang and back stay, both positioned at the helmsman’s reach, complete the deck plan of a boat specially designed for (fast) single-handed sailing.

We sail between houses that look like something out of a storybook to Radbound Castle that, in its beauty, marks at the same time the exit of the Port of Medemblik and our entry to the IJsselmeer.

A light breeze makes the water ripple while the mainsail is hoisted by Marcel Offereins who, thanks to the duplication of the electric mainsail winch switch, performs the maneuver autonomously and effortlessly from the starboard helm station. We slightly bear away, unfurl the jib and stop the engine.

Tessa – that’s the name of our Contest 42CS – heels a little and goes. We adjust sails and speed increases quickly, there are not more than 6-7 knots of air but, at 50 degrees from the wind, we are already sailing at 6 knots!

Georg Nissen must have been particularly inspired when he designed the hull lines of this yacht.

We perform a series tacking that Tessa faces without hardly slowing down; then, the sea seems to get darker, winds energy increases and, like a gift from the heavens, it stabilizes at 9-10 knots of true wind, which represents the perfect conditions for our sea trial.

We try to hug the wind and the Contest gives us a 6.3-knot speed at 25 degrees from the apparent wind. This is a very narrow angle where most cruisers fail to perform well while, instead, our Contest 42CS is really great. We slightly bear away and Tessa immediately accelerates; at 50 degrees we reach 7.3 knots that, with a true wind of 10 knots, is another good result.

While we sail, I suddenly realize that I’m standing in the cockpit with a notebook in my hand while I’m writing down. The stability of this boat is striking. I must steer her, now!

So, I leave my notebook and Marcel lets me take the wheel. I sit on the leeward side, I put my hands on the helm and, instantly, I start to “feel” Tessa.

It’s a bit like all the forces at play were channeled to this wheel that, sublimely, instantly retransmits in the form of sensations, to the palm of my hand.

Slight variations on the wheel are enough to make the play reverse and, equally instantly, make the bow turn by that tenth of degree we had just figured to give to our current course.

The sensation I feel is very similar to the amazing one that, until today, I thought it was possible only with a tiller bar rudder and that, on this boat, is even more refined because this hull is stable, progressive and never nervous.

A motorboat passes by us and raises a steep wave that reaches our port loof while we are sailing close-hauled on the same tack. Tessa doesn’t care about this and cuts through the way unperturbed, without slowing down. This boat is definitively designed to sail.

I bear away a little and start to go down at 70 degrees from the apparent wind and, while the angle of the true wind is well above 100 degrees, our Contest 42CS keeps running at 7 knots. Slowing further, despite the 105% jib, speeds remain relatively high and Tessa seems not to want to stop. With a gennaker on board, this yacht can certainly eat up many miles a day, regardless of wind direction.

Then, fate gives us another gift and, even for a little while, true wind rises to 12 knots. I luff, the boat heeled and, at 35 degrees from the apparent wind, I see the log showing a constant speed of 8/8.1 knots. Under these conditions, however, Tessa sails quietly, heeling is contained. The seaworthiness of this hull is proverbial.

Reluctantly, I give the wheel back to Marcel and, while we sail close-hauled at about 8 knots, I go to ceck how sailing experience is from the perspective of passengers.  It goes without saying that, on a sailboat like this, there’s no shortage of handrails and you can move from a point to another in total safety. Nevertheless, I move without the need to find a handhold or to lean against something to find a balance that, vice versa, Tessa gives me herself with her safe gait.

Benches in the cockpit are high and well-protected, I test them both windward and leeward and, needless to say, they are ergonomically perfect. You can stay seated without your body having to struggle to keep its position, even when the boat is heeled.

I stand up, I reach the hatchway and start to climb down. Steps feature raised ends with an angle that corresponds to the ideal close-hauled; in short, when climbing down, your feet lean on a flat safe surface.

When I arrive in the ward-room, again, the Contest 42CS astonishes me. In the dinette, silence is absolute, no creak is audible, nothing moves and, above all, water lapping along the hull is absolutely silent.

Sitting in the dinette, while we sail heeled at about 8 knots, I perceive only the noise that, passing trough the hatchway, arrives muffled from the outside. The comfort of this yacht at sea is unique, I had never experienced anything like this before.

While I’m sitting, the details of the boats I had seen under construction in the shipyard come to my mind in the form of pictures and everything becomes clearer.

Structural rigidity, sound and thermal insulation are all advantages that result from a construction technology that Contest Yachts uses for all its boats, large and small.

Building quality, attention to details, performances and pleasure of steering are perfectly joint together in this sailing yacht that, inevitably, ends up showing all its superiority over any other boat we’ve seen and tested to date.

I go back in the cockpit and I enjoy the last minutes of navigation; then, when it is time to go back, maybe as a mark of respect or maybe to appease the displeasure to leave a boat like this, wind energy, too, decreases and comes to greet our entry into the port.

Performances under sail

Sea Trial Conditions

2 passengers aboard – fuel capacity at 100% – water capacity at 50% – laden boat in cruising trim – true wind from 7 to 10 knots – almost calm/slightly rough sea

Feedback

Technically speaking, we could consider the Contest 42CS as a highly versatile sailboat capable to stand out both in club races and for recreational purposes.

Stable, comfortable and fast at all speeds, she can sail many miles a day that, combined with a livability that is typical of larger boats, undoubtedly earn her the definition of “blue water cruiser”.

The possibility to customize the deck plan extensively, adapting it to the various owner’s needs, makes this boat a definitively perfect yacht.

Contest Yachts : that’s how boats are built

To talk about construction as we do with other boats would be simplistic when we talk about a Contest. For more than half a century, indeed, this shipyard has been building boats that, in addition to being built with refined materials and very high quality standards, reflect their owner’s desires.

This is why the shipyard combines technologically advanced building technologies, including Conyplex vacuum infusion system®, and handcrafted production of the most important parts, where the expertise of its boat-builders makes a tangible difference.

A clear example of this is furniture that, not only is manufactured in accordance with best practice, but is also positioned with a precision and a care that don’t fear the judgement of the time.

The teak deck is another masterpiece. Manufactured using a special, highly refined technique, it leaves to the seam a predominantly aesthetic function. Using dry building technology, it is vacuum bonded to the deck with maniacal precision. The result is simply incomparable to any other technique used.

All materials used, wood essences, fittings and equipment are high-quality. Electric systems are oversized and therefore safe.

Hull construction deserves a separate chapter. On the one had, we have the famous vacuum infusion system developed by Conyplex that, through a 24-hour process, completely removes air while reducing resin percentage to 30%, with a clear advantage in terms of weight and sturdiness, considering that the fiber gives strength to the hull.

On the other hand, there is an extensive use of a balsa core that, used from top to bottom, provides all boats with a sound and thermal insulation that must be tested to fully understand its countless advantages.

The combination of these two techniques results in the construction of boats that are extraordinarily sturdy, comfortable and practically free from any osmotic phenomena.

But what has impressed me the most about this shipyard is how the quality standard and the reckless attention to details used in the construction of the flagship are used for the construction of the smallest of the range in exactly the same way.

Maybe that’s why to sail on board this Contest 42CS inevitably tends to create an addiction that it is very difficult to extinguish.

Unless we’re back to test another Contest, of course…

Contest Yachts

Overleek 5
1671 GD Medemblik
The Netherlands
tel +31 227 543 644

info@contestyachts.com
www.contestyachts.com

Luca D'Ambrosio

Editor-in-chief, boat tester and journalist. Luca began sailing at an early age with his father then as an adult discovered sailing regattas and offshore racing. He has been working in publishing for more than 30 years and continues to sail incessantly, especially aboard the editorial staff's boat, an old lady of the seas that he has completely rebuilt and which serves excellently as a "mobile laboratory" for The International Yachting Media.

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