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Dufour 470 Yacht Review: Performance & Design

The document reviews the Dufour 470 sailboat. It provides details about the boat's design and construction, noting it aims to offer performance, stability, and livability. The review describes the different sailing packages and highlights features like the galley, cockpit, and anchoring abilities.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
171 views10 pages

Dufour 470 Yacht Review: Performance & Design

The document reviews the Dufour 470 sailboat. It provides details about the boat's design and construction, noting it aims to offer performance, stability, and livability. The review describes the different sailing packages and highlights features like the galley, cockpit, and anchoring abilities.

Uploaded by

alensailnet
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Dufour 470 Review

Leave a Comment / Boat Review / By James

Words & Photography by James Dumergue – Originally published in Trade A Boat Magazine
November 2021

Dufour 470 Review

Hailing from La Rochelle, France’s renowned yacht building region, Dufour shares a birthplace with many
world-renowned yacht manufacturers. One, in particular, saw an opportunity outside its typical buyers
market to add value to the brand from their own experience and global success. Embracing the DNA of
Dufours sailing pedigree and injecting livability enhancements and advanced construction techniques, the
Dufour 470 is a serious player in the production monohull market.

New direction – Dufour 470 Review


In 2018 renowned power and sailing multihull yard from La Rochelle, Fountaine Pajot, invested in Dufour
Yachts. Since Fountaine Pajot became involved, they’ve complimented the Dufour marque by adding
manufacturing advancements with injection moulded hulls and synergy of customer-focused support that
reaches almost as far as owners ambitions.

Three n 1 – Dufour 470 Review


Dufour is known in the last two decades for producing two lines. The Cruising focused Grand Large line,
and the Racing focused Performance line. In recent years the market has contracted in the racing market
and expanded in the cruising and casual sailing market. There is demand for performance yachts, but
buyers today have a focus that looks as seriously at the livability and on anchor experience as much as
the performance characteristics.
Since the 1960’s Dufour has taken an adaptive approach to the market, the first of the new breed
revealed in 2020 continue that versatility. This time three clear sailing types are catered to, Casual,
Cruising and Racing. What’s different from before is they managed to do this from the one mould. The
new 470, 530 and 61 all come in the three new offerings.

If they share the same hull, it begs the question, how do they create a hull that offers solid stability for the
casual sailing and possibly the charter market and still satisfy the performance cruiser market?

The approach is a wide-body hull design with hard chines. It’s lighter and more robust than previous
models. The hulls are now injection moulded, creating far less wasted fibreglass and a much better
combination of resin and fibreglass resulting in less weight and high strength. They are not the lightest
yachts in the category, but they certainly look built for longevity.

Combined with other factors like the position of the mast, keel and rudder, provide an overall package
that determines the characteristics of the design. At 15’5″, the generous beam does not translate to a
sticky slow hull at all. A great deal of that beam is above the waterline, and there has been an effort to
reduce the wetted surface area in other ways. Lifting the transom out of the water has reduced the wetted
surface, as does the use of hard chines to reduce the angle of the heel and improve stability.

It feels like a balanced sailing experience with more tolerance and forgiveness during gusts. The
advantage of the hard-chine design is that it increases the buoyancy right at the location point of the
heeling. The single rudder remained immersed in clear water forward with less chance of exposing itself
and losing grip in the disturbed water near the transom. As the wind increased and the load on the single
rudder increased, it held firm. The yacht is way less inclined to round up and is way more lenient on the
helm when the gusts come along, allowing us to get away from having to reduce the sail area. The
directional lines of the pronounced chine also offer a better tracking experience.

They’ve done an excellent job of building a platform that is very forgiving to sudden gusts, which keeps
the adrenalin levels down in Easy Package and allows the Performance Package to carry more sail
further up the wind range for consistently faster speeds.

The differences – Dufour 470 Review

Above the gunnels is where you see the differences between the three 470s. The main differences are in
sail control and sail configuration. Recognising that not everyone wants to explore beyond the horizon,
Dufour created the easy package. It is a package that keeps it simple and easy to do short-handed, with
little impact on the cockpit by the sailing. It’s configured for people who like sailing but don’t have to do it
in a hurry or flurry. They’ve named it the Easy Package for a reason, in-mast furling and a self-tacking jib
on a track will mean you’ll get out more often with less reliance on others, a perfect way to share or
introduce sailing to novice crew.
Today’s test yacht is Ocean Package. If the easy package is almost like sailing an automatic, the ocean
package is like sailing a manual SUV with some low down grunt. Dividing sailing roles into three stations
gives the coastal and ocean cruising market more control and sail options. Instead of running it all back to
the helm as it does on the Easy Package, the Ocean Package splits it with lines running back to either
side of the companionway. Mounted on either side of the companion are T50 winches. One powered
winch helps with the halyards reefing lines and operating the German Main sheet system running on a
traveller forward of the dodger. On each side of the cockpit are two more sets of winches, one
controllable in front of the helm and one from the helm position.

Upping the sail choices on the test boat are genoa tracks and cars with deck hardware to run the
asymmetrical spinnaker. Once you step up to the performance package, you’re getting something pretty
slick looking. The sleek exterior design adds the back anodised aluminium mast, boom, standing rigging,
running back-stay and stanchions, plus a composite wheel at each helm. For performance, larger
powered winches for the Genoa and Spinnaker sheets deal better with the increased loads, and a single
point mounts the main sheet on the cockpit floor in place of the cockpit table on the ocean version. Sails
are upgradable too, the incremental performance enhancements can put your nose in front when it
counts and your feet up in style when you’re there.

Sailing the Ocean – Dufour 470 Review

The sails are raised as we cleared the channel out from Royal Queensland Yacht Squadron and head
into Moreton Bay. The wind’s start off around 12-14 knots. We awaken the main from the lazy bag that
houses it and we unfurl the self-tacking jib. The sheets and halyards, all getting a stretch as we tune the
sails and settle into our first run about 40 degrees off the wind.
The single rudder set forward of the well-rockered transom, combined with the mast positioning and the
keel, resulting in impressive tracking, and the heel is consistently stable. Gusting to around 16-18 knot
range, what stood out was it maintained composure and didn’t feel overpowered and even without the
complete tune-up, we were sailing in the 6.5 -7.5 knot range with ease.

The simple angled pedestal helms have most of the instrumentation on the starboard helm, a central
chart plotter installed below the cockpit table and is viewable from both helms. A gap between the two
bimini’s gives a good view of the main from the helm, but it also provides welcome headspace to pass
through to the side deck from the cockpit. Flush skylights and deck hatches make moving forward on the
expansive side decks uncomplicated. The uncluttered space at the bow for anchoring duties also
conceals a huge storage locker for the deflated tender, outboard and more. The decent deck beam
forward provides a usable space to throw up a shade at anchor and enjoy the breeze on the foredeck.

When it’s time to drop the hook, the new design from Dufour has some more personalities and effortlessly
transforms into the holiday unit over the water. Over on the port helm, there are two subtle buttons and
four drink holders. Once at anchor, you realise what they are for, and it’s not a couple of light switches
and provision for an exceptionally thirsty port helm’s person. The buttons raise and lower the swim
platform, the port transom seat lifts provide wide-open access. Lifting the middle transom seat forward
reveals the outdoor cooking station with a barbeque hot plate, bench space and sink for potentially one of
the shortest hook to cook journeys your fresh catch could have. Dufour has worked out that the port helm
is the most social position of the cockpit. It catches the breeze and connects with the transom, the cockpit
and the side decks forward and thats why it deserves so many drinks holders.
The large cockpit table seats eight to ten people. Even with just the starboard side of the table raised,
there’s dining space for at least four people with casual seating opposite and unobstructed access down
below. Central drink holders, an ice chest in the centre of the table for entertaining and a weather-sealed
USB charging point below the table complete the modern cockpit setup.

Down Below – Dufour 470 Review

The beam of the boat is striking as you go below. To starboard, the four-sided dining booth doesn’t
impede past the centre line leaving an open flat floor space that suits casual moving about an
entertaining area that is much more open and usable with the reduction of obstructions. A casual two-
person settee/lounge to port creates a spacious open plan feel with a great sightline to the water through
the hull window, plus it’s a great companion lounge to the galley.
The Galley – Dufour 470 Review

The breath of fresh air in the design below is the galley forward, effectively spanning the entire beam
forward of the saloon. What this creates is tranquillity for the galley. It’s gone from typically being the
busiest intersection of the boat to having only one thoroughfare to the owner’s cabin forward. The cabin
door forward splits the galley into two sides, cooking and washing up to port and a food prep and drinks
station to starboard. Equipment on the port side includes a gas cooktop and oven on a gimbal and a deep
sink. To starboard, multifunction fridge/freezer drawers, wine bottle storage and plenty of overhead locker
storage allow the sorting, prepping and entertaining duties to happen away from the hot and wet side of
the galley.
Accommodations – Dufour 470 Review

Carrying the volume forward above the waterline of the main cabin creates a very liveable arrangement
with a separate toilet to starboard just inside the cabin door and a separate shower to port. Between and
drenched in natural light is a very lovely king-sized island berth with enough space on either side to have
an easy time getting in and out of bed. Much like the saloon, many facets of the cabin benefit from the
light and airy feel from the glazed overhead deck skylights, two opening deck hatches and hull windows
perfect for looking out from the bed. The light, wood cabinetry mixed with white panelling creates a
remarkably open and immersive connection with the sky above and the water below.
Guest accommodations are identical cabins port and starboard aft of the saloon, except for some headroom in the
starboard cabin over the bed. On the port side, they share the second bathroom with a separate shower. The size
is good, and the storage is decent for long term usage. This layout makes the most of the livability below, but there
are more options for more cabins and different configurations to suit all sorts of uses.
The Dufour 470 is a solid platform to offer three sailing options and multiple configurations below. Under the
Fountaine Pajot umbrella, the brand is flourishing internationally and domestically. Such confidence in the brand
that the Australiasian Dealers Yacht Sales Co (the sister company of Multihull Solutions) has secured 17 yachts for
delivery in 2022 and 2023. Nine of these are Dufour 470s. Brand manager for the region Bob Vinks knows owners
of Dufour yachts will benefit from the vast network of support available through the long-established network built
over the years by Fountaine Pajot’s dealers in Australiasia.
Expect to see more Dufour in the future.

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