Boat test for the 2006 Lazzara 84 with boat pictures, boat specifications, and boat test results. Includes pricing, videos, engine test reviews, and ratings for the 2006 Lazzara 84.

 
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HOME  >  BOAT TESTS  >  LAZZARA  >  2006 LAZZARA 84
 BOAT TEST: 2006 Lazzara 84
BOAT SPECIFICATIONS
Boat Type: Megayacht (> 80')
Base Price: $5,050,000
Standard Power: 2/1,550-hp Caterpillar C30 diesel inboards
Optional Power: none
Length Overall (LOA): 85'2"
Beam: 20'1"
Draft: 4'6"
Weight: 135,000 lbs.
Fuel Capacity: 2,000 gal.
Water Capacity: 400 gal.
Standard Equipment: American Bow Thruster ABT Trac stabilization system; SidePower bow thruster; 2/Northstar 6000i integrated navigation systems, 2/Simrad AP25 autopilots; Simrad radar and GPS; 2/Furuno DR-30 depthsounders; KVH TracVision satellite TV; 2/21.5-kW Onan gensets; KitchenAid refrigerator-freezer; GE Profile microwave; KitchenAid oven; Frigidaire dishwasher; Cruisair A/C; Bosch stacked washer/dryer; 42” Fujitsu plasma TVs; hydraulic swim platform
Test Engines: 2/1,550-hp Caterpillar C30 diesel inboards
Transmissions / Ratio: ZF 2050A/2.43:1
Props: 38x46 5-blade Rolla S-class
Steering: Jastra hydraulic w/ power-assist
Controls: Caterpillar single-lever electronic
Optional Equipment On Test Boat: pecan wood interior; retractable hydraulic Opacmare pasarelle; 14' Novurania MX430 DL tender w/ 50-hp Yamaha 4-stroke gasoline outboard; Sub-zero freezer drawers in galley; 2/wooden deck chairs; 20'' LCD aft-deck TV
Price As Tested: $5,368,597
Conditions: temperature: 80º; humidity: 69%; wind: 20-25 mph; seas: 4-6’; load: 2,000 gal. fuel, 400 gal. water, 6 persons, 1,000 lbs. gear. Speeds are two-way averages measured w/Stalker radar gun. GPH measured with Caterpillar electronic fuel-monitoring system. Range: 90% of advertised fuel capacity. Decibels measured on A scale. 65 dB is the level of normal conversation.

By Capt. Patrick Sciacca

The boat’s ensign looks starch-stiff. It’s blowing 20-plus knots, and white-tipped four- to six-footers roll in steady sets. From the flying bridge 20-plus feet above the frothing water, I see a Gulf Stream horizon that looks like Monet’s “Rough Sea at Etretat.” Perfect.

Beneath my feet sits 135,000 pounds of time-tested hull, stout construction, and first-rate craftsmanship. I’m onboard the Lazzara 84, and she engages the sea without pause: 25 mph, 30 mph, 36 mph display on my radar gun. She’s now making 36.5 mph, spray is exploding to the sides with depth-charge-like force as the twin 1,550-hp C30 Caterpillars hum along at 2315 rpm and the 38x46 five-blade Rolla props chew up the water and hurtle this behemoth forward.

The 84 is putting the big hurt on the ocean today thanks to her modified-V, single-strake, shallow-keel hull that’s constructed of vacuum-bagged triaxial unidirectional fiberglass with balsa coring in her hull, deck, and flying bridge to add stiffness but not weight. There’s also solid fiberglass in her keel, chines, and hull-penetration areas for extra strengthening. Her keel is reinforced additionally with cement.

a d v e r t i s e m e n t

“Run her beam-to,” instructs Dick Lazzara, owner and chief designer of Lazzara Yachts, turning over the wheel as he disappears down the steps to starboard just abaft the flying-bridge Jacuzzi to check on some things below. I note the heading. She’s tracking steady while beam-to the seas. American Bow Thruster’s two-fin hydraulic stabilizers snub most of the roll as we run in the trough. Her engine-driven power-assist steering is real-time responsive. Out of curiosity I turn her upsea with the help of the custom-designed solid-cast stainless steel rudders, and the 84 easily splits the seas with her fine entry. Occasionally she dips her bow through a wave, yet spray isn’t reaching up to the flying bridge.

As well as she’s handling, she’s also quiet. After my wring-out I head below to the main-deck starboard-side helm station to get some decibel readings. I take my first at 1000 rpm. Fifty-eight dB-A? Heck, 65 is the level of normal conversation! I shake the unit. Check the batteries. Check them again. The low readings continue as speed increases: 59, 61, until we’re at WOT and my meter is clocking 71. This is library quiet. Lazzara explains that sound attenuation is a major goal, and that the quiet stems in part from the drivetrain. Basically, it’s a huge strut molded out of stainless steel that absorbs a fair amount of sound. Lazzara also floats its floors: Between the sole and stringers are a hundred or so quarter-inch-size rubber doughnuts that absorb vibration. Even the urethane used to secure the sole has sound-absorbent properties. Yet the surface under my feet is solid as a rock, thanks in part to one 70-plus-foot main-deck plate that is bonded to the hull, creating a monocoque structure that minimizes creaking and cracking. The bulkheads are also cored and have isolators between the structure and the finished surface. “Almost like a soundroom,” Lazzara says, adding, “Any sound that hits that panel is isolated in the wall.” Of course, the underwater exhaust also contributes.

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