

Motor Specifications

Quiet at the helm

Boat-wide comfort

Fully featured galley

Stylish and useful on-deck hardware

The 52’s curved lines

Performance Chart
LOA: 52’0″
BEAM: 15’3″
DRAFT: 2’11”
DISPL.: 31,000 lb.
FUEL: 800 gal.
WATER: 238 gal.
DEADRISE: 15 degrees
ENGINES (tested): 2 x 575 hp Caterpillar C9 diesels
PRICE AS TESTED: $1,895,000 Test Conditions:
Speeds were measured by GPS off Fort Lauderdale, Florida, in calm seas and 5-knot winds with 33 percent fuel, full water and three persons aboard. Fuel consumption was measured with the Caterpillar electronic engine-monitoring system. Sound levels were measured at the helm with windows and doors closed.
Sleek with broad shoulders
She’s stout and sultry? How’d they make that happen?
These were my initial thoughts as the all-aluminum, Dutch-built Van der Heijden 52 caught my gaze quayside in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. If boat sections could speak, her plumb bow might say it’s ready to slice and dice sloppy seas, while her broad shoulders would be more likely to bellow, “It’s clobbering time!” She proposes quite an intriguing juxtaposition, one that the builder and the 52’s champion stateside, Dick Phillips, know how to do well.
Phillips, whose father, Herbert, founded Striker Yachts, has a lifetime of experience creating aluminum boat lines with companies like Heesen, Diaship and others. And over the last 20 years, Van der Heijden has built and sold more than 400 boats to a global market. In fact, my test 52 is Hull No. 2.