Marine

Rand's latest motorboat offers electric cruising for up to 10 people

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The Mana 23 is capable of displacement cruising at up to 15 knots
Rand Boats
The Mana 23 is capable of displacement cruising at up to 15 knots
Rand Boats
The deck layout of the Mana 23 electric day cruiser
Rand Boats
The Mana 23 can accommodate up to 10 passengers
Rand Boats
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After focusing on speed with the launch of the Leisure 28 Electric in March, Danish boat maker Rand has opted to take things a little easier for its latest model. The Mana 23 offers displacement cruising for 10 passengers at 5 knots for up to 100 nautical miles.

The electric day cruiser has an open deck layout designed for entertaining family and friends, with face to face bench seating to the front of the cockpit, separated by a small table and lots of metal drinks holders dotted around to keep tipples from toppling.

Rand will install an optional midship kitchen to the front of the steering console if desired, at the expense a couple of seats. Guests can pop up the built-in bimini top with optional side windows while out on the water, and those looking to top up their tans can do so on the aft sunbeds, while a bathing platform invites passengers to go for a swim.

The deck layout of the Mana 23 electric day cruiser
Rand Boats

The Mana 23 has a hull length of 720 cm (23.6 ft) and is built for low maintenance boating. A special eco edition comes with a material palette including balsa wood, flax fibers, bio-resin and cork.

Rand says that this model has not been developed for fast and sporty planing, but for displacement cruising for up to 30 nautical miles at 12 knots, or 100 nautical miles at 5 knots. Outboard motor options are yet to be announced, though solar panels for topping up the batteries have been mentioned.

The Mana 23 will be available from early next year for a starting price of €43,900 (about US$52k), with motor and battery options open to tailoring for specific customer needs.

Source: Rand Boats

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5 comments
BlueOak
Cool stuff. For the folks who won’t be seen on a pontoon boat.
Username
Apart from the water taxi industry I don't really see a purpose.
nick101
Displacement cruisers are the only kind of electric boat that makes any sense to me. You don't even need fancy batteries, inexpensive deep-cycle batteries are plenty good enough. You needn't worry too much about weight on a displacement boat, if you don't need to plane you just cruise along very economically. I'm hoping to build one next year.
Bill Shorten
What else do you need in a short-cruise, pleasure boat? Too many boat designs are "indoor" cabins with little to no space for actually lounging "outdoors" on deck space. What else is a boat for other than enjoying the sky, the sea, and the sights? Great job - hopefully it comes with a canopy so that people don't get scorched from sun-sea radiation.
Bill Shorten
Looks like an old "woody" design, minus the wood.