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» » In Pictures: Boats and water toys of the 2015 Interboot show

In Pictures: Boats and water toys of the 2015 Interboot show

After viewing the concert cars, SUVs and other attrctions of this year's Frankfurt Motor Show headed south to Lake Constance for the 2015 Interboot show. The show isn't quite as large as Boot Dusseldorf, which we attended back in January, but it is blessed with late-summer weather and a location right on the water. We saw everything from ceiling-scraping sailboats and hydrofoils, to compact electric leisure vessels, to modulars and inflatables.
 /ШУУД ҮЗЭХ/

A bit larger than the kayaks and rowboats typical of multi-piece, collapsible boat design, the Polish-designed Solemaran is a dual-hulled electric boat for two that breaks down via a series of structural deck planks and supports. It's not nearly as compact as some other designs we've looked at, but it's sized to fit neatly on a rooftop kayak rack or on the Solemaran trailer.
A few mavericks within the boating industry feel that the market has gotten too mature and stale. In an effort to color in some of the gray of those seafaring beards, they're designing vessels that are more visually appealing and youthful. It's in the name for Germany's Young Urban Boating (YUB), which slices distinct lines and curves into its advanced-composite hulls and splashes them with bright, cheery colors.
While YUB's vessels were certainly cool, the Bente24 was probably the most interesting example we saw of a new "young" boat. Created with help from a group of design students and a large social media following, the Bente24 is positioned as a fresh, reborn sailing cruiser. The project began in early 2014 and went from rough idea to sea-ready prototype in a little over a year.
The Bente24 is a simple, streamlined design developed from the outside in – the focus is on fast cruising, not so much on luxurious on-water living. The Bente team has worked hard to leave out unnecessary equipment that not all buyers need or want, keeping the price of the basic, ready-to-sail boat at €25,000 (US$28,000). Buyers that want more can build their vessel up from the options list with equipment like slide-out cooking and wash modules that stow away under the seats.
We have to say that Bente designers have done a good job developing a fresh design because the boat caught our attention well before we knew anything about it. The sharp, clean white hull, tinted glass and orange structural support make it hard to ignore.
Electric power continues to be fashionable on the water, and we saw many a craft flashing the grays and oranges of a Torqeedo electric motor out its backside, including the aforementioned Bente24.
Beyond the debuts of the Chili Island and J-Force electric water toys, the most interesting thing in electric design we saw came from Boesch. The Swiss boatyard speaks of a proprietary laminate process that it uses to transform multiple layers of mahogany into hulls that are highly aesthetic, lightweight, torsionally rigid and stable. It offers both electric and V8 options on boats ranging in size from 20.3 to 24.6 feet (6.2 to 7.5 m). Its electric boats aren't quite as powerful or fast as the NOX SV, but they do offer a similarly attractive blend of wood construction and quiet, zero-emissions power.

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