Pursuit 2670 Cuddy Console
What do you get when you mix a bucket, an old crab trap float and Pursuit's 2670 Cuddy Console? Dinner.
By Alan Jones
October 1, 2001
To the average person, there's nothing remarkable about a five-gallon
bucket, an old crab trap float and some seaweed skimming along the surface of the blue Gulf Stream
water behind the Pursuit 2670 Cuddy Console. But to an experienced skipper, it is a signpost that
says, 'fresh fish.' It has been one of those days when the sea seems as vast and empty as a desert
' no weedlines, birds, rip currents, color changes and no action. During times like these, you lay
low, cover some water and play the piscatorial lottery.
But if you are going to put in a day at the fishing office and stay at the helm for eight
hours, this is your boat. Ergonom-ically speaking, no one does a better job of setting up a helm
than Pursuit. The 16-inch Edson cast aluminum wheel feels good, and thanks to the comfortable
leaning post with a sturdy, padded backrest, foot driving is the preferred lazy-boy position du
jour. The gauges for the pair of Yamaha 150-hp HPDI engines sit high on the angled console, as does
the all-in-one oversized Raytheon GPS/fishfinder display. The curved, one-piece windshield is tall
and affords good protection against the elements, even for passengers riding shotgun behind the
standard leaning post. Although a pair of V-strut support bars for the sturdy T-top intrudes into
the forward field of vision, the tubing is smaller and minimizes their impact.
Heading out of the Ft.
Pierce Inlet, located 60 miles north of West Palm Beach, Florida, proves to be a non-event due to
the light winds and a slack tide. This can be one of Florida's more treacherous inlets when the
tide is going out and opposes a prevailing southeasterly wind. The winds are forecast to increase
in the afternoon, so the 2670's inlet-bashing skills should be tested on the return trip. Offshore
conditions are ideal for high-speed 'running and gunning,' so the throttles are advanced and the
twin Yamaha HPDIs settle in to a comfortable 35 mph cruise speed. The accurate fuel management
gauge indicates a burn rate of just 17 gallons per hour, netting approximately two miles to the
gallon. Not bad for a boat with an overall length of 26 feet 6 inches and a loaded weight of nearly
four tons. With twin aluminum fuel tanks totaling 188 gallons, the Pursuit has plenty of range to
visit remote fishing locations.
Even with seas of only two
feet, the 2670 reveals a solid ride with no rattles or banging, except for an irritating little
squeak coming from the optional Top Gun outriggers. There's little reason to use the recessed trim
tabs, because the Pursuit is running level and directional control is superb, whether at idle or
cruise. The 2670 can plane with only one engine and can hold its plane at 15 mph without trim tabs,
which is useful in rough water. In light chop it rides better going fast. At around 37 mph the bow
dips down, which helps to use its sharper entry to slice its way through the waves, without having
to use the trim tabs.
Out of sight of land in 120 feet of water, no encouraging signs of activity have been
spotted, so plan 'B' is to prospect by trolling. Heading to the stern and flipping up the starboard
lid reveals the bait prep station, which includes a tray for trolling baits and a sink with a
freshwater spigot fed by an 18-gallon tank. Below is a tackle storage compartment with organizing
trays, so the rigger can take care of business while staying in one place. Just behind the leaning
post is even more tackle storage with four slide-out boxes and one center compartment for storing
larger items such as bulk spools. Flipping up the lid adjacent to the bait prep station reveals a
lighted,50-gallon livewell with recirculating pump to keep bait lively for the duration of the
trip. Stout hydraulic dams keep the stern lids up, and with the lids down, the wide transom turns
into a great work area for cutting bait or cleaning fish. Selecting five ballyhoo from the bait
tray, it's just a matter of minutes before they are skipping along the indigo blue surface, some
naked, some with skirts.
When using carbureted 2-stroke engines, most anglers avoid trolling downwind because of the
exhaust fumes. For some, the combination of inhaling fumes and a rocking boat can be enough to
trigger the human 'chumming' reflex, but the direct-injected Yamahas mean this is not a factor.
Trolling at 6 mph at 1000 rpm shows that the HPDIs are burning a paltry 2.9 gallons per hour, and
they're quiet too, registering only 62 decibels at idle. Apparently the 2670 is built for
successful fishermen because, curiously, there is no seating in the fishing cockpit, although
Pursuit wins back some points for the cockpit cupholders.
While scanning the horizon for birds or weedlines, the driver notices something white
bobbing in the water. Going closer to investigate, the crew sees a five-gallon bucket, crab trap
buoy and some accumulated seaweed. Often, small fish shelter underneath floating debris, and in
turn draw larger predators. The anglers hold their breath with anticipation as the baits go past
the flotsam/jetsam. The first pass doesn't produce a hit, nor does the second through the sixth.
Our skipper stops nearby and puts the engines in neutral, dices up some cut bait and begins to
chum, free-spooling the line to match the drift of the chum.
Suddenly the reel screams as a small dolphin leaps high into the air. Although just a
'shaker,' the five-pounder is soon hoisted up and deposited into the fish box set into the cockpit
sole in the stern. A quick blast with the raw water washdown takes care of fish juice, and the crew
goes back to the action.
The mid-day temperature peaks at 90, so the crew heads to the seat in front of the console,
flips up the seat bottom and pulls out some ice-cold drinks, which they promptly drain. They decide
to head back, so all the lines are brought in and stowed away. If you can rank a serious fishing
boat by the number of places you can stow a rod, the 2670 rates a 10. There are four in-gunwale rod
holders, four under, four in the T-top, and four rocket launchers behind the leaning post. And
that's not all. Opening the ventilated cuddy cabin door reveals rod racks for another 14 rods, for
a grand total of 30.
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The cuddy cabin door features a louvered bi-fold design
and secures open with a hook. To make it a step-in cabin, there's a roof hatch that flips open for
easy entrance. Inside, the cabin is spartan, but the V-berth is large enough to sleep two
full-sized anglers, and there's a standard head with macerator and a 9-gallon holding tank. The
cuddy is well-lit with a tinted overhead hatch and electrical lighting, and while it's roomy enough
for weekending, most folks will probably use it as a giant, lockable storage compartment. When
combined with the roomy console, which has a dive tank rack option, a whole boatload of vacationers
heading to the Bahamas for a week on the water won't have any problem finding room for all their
gear.
However, the real benefit of the cuddy cabin isn't revealed until cruising back to the mainland. Without warning, the captain elbows the rider in the ribs during a subdued conversation and shouts 'Sailfish!' Laying the 2670 into an unbelievably tight turn, they head to the free-jumping sail. With a pair of baits in the water, the captain trolls toward the spot where the sailfish had been jumping into the air. Standing on the tall cuddy cabin roof (made safer with the bow rail and generous step-ups), the mate scans the water intently trying to locate the billfish. This would be a great perch for sight casting to species such as cobia, or for just throwing a cast net at bait, but it doesn't help locate the stray sailfish. But it's just as well, since the crew spots dark clouds building in the west. Laying the throttles flat against the console pushes the Pursuit 2670 toward the inlet at slightly more than 43 mph. The tide is just starting to turn, and the 2670 handles the swirling current easily. The lack of nooks and crannies in the cockpit makes cleanup easy, as does the fish box, which has a depressed area to promote complete macerated drainage. All the wet compartments drain overboard, and the truncated diamond non-skid deck scrubs clean easily. Spending a day aboard the Pursuit 2670 gives you a chance to enjoy the subtlety of good design. When everything is in the right place, you don't necessarily notice it, which is precisely the point. Pursuit is an industry leader in fit and finish, and a comment recently heard from a leading boatbuilder sums it up: 'We are trying to achieve the same level of workmanship as Tiara/Pursuit.' Priced at $83,530 with a pair of high-tech Yamaha HPDI 150s, the 2670 is not the highest-priced boat for its size, it's merely one of the best. |
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