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2012 Monterey 328SS Super Sport | 32ft
Boat Highlights:
Year of Vessel
2012
Fuel Type
GASOLINE
Length
32 ft
Manufacturer
Monterey
Condition
Pre-owned
Boat Type
Power
2012 Monterey 328 Super Sport 32'2"
High-end, Joystick-controlled Low hour, Dry-stored 32-foot Monterey 328 priced to sell.
- 50 MPH bowrider with overnight cabin and enormous seating capabilities
- Twin-5.7 Volvo Penta GI (2x 300 hp I/O’s) with joystick-controlled duo prop drives. 418 hours
- Bow seating with lounges arm rests, electric windlass, and under-seat storage
- Automotive-style helm with Joystick and Digital Throttle and Shift, Raymarine HybridTouch Chart Plotter, Volvo Digital Computer, Stainless Steel Windshield
- Port-side sleeping berth/cabin with microwave, stereo, flatscreen-TV
- Starboard: Full size head with flushing head, sink, and shower
- Aft: Great entertainment area including granite-like counter top wet bar with stainless steel fridge
- Aft Lounge is electrically actuated to convert into a full-length sun bed
- Walk-thru transom with hot/cold shower
- Enormous swim platform with a stainless steel ladder
This is a marina-kept, family-owned 328 SS that always been dry-stored and cared for. Service is up to date, it's priced to sell. Come see it at our store in Pompano, conveniently located just east of I-95 on the North side of Atlantic Blvd.
Monterey pulled no stops in designing the rest of the 328SS either. The hallmark edge styling — in which corners and straight lines, rather than radiuses and swoops, create a dramatic interplay of light and shadow — lends the 328SS an aggressive stance when viewed in profile. This philosophy is applied to more than just the prominent lines like sheer, stem and rake of the windshield. Grab rails, bow rails, fiddle rails and windshield support rails are square in section. Insets and recesses, such as those for stereo speakers or drink holders, also feature edge styling. There’s the base of the radar arch, the wet-bar inlay, the engine vents — heck, even the stitched tufting of the upholstery reinforces the theme. The sum is a powerful visual impact.
A stainless-steel windshield frame is standard, and led accent lights are installed in the engine vents, around the platform and around the perimeter of the aft lounge. The helm seat hardware is lustrous stainless — in a place where so many builders use cheaper powder-coated metal — and so are the cleats, embossed with Monterey’s marque. There’s plenty of sparkle day or night aboard the 328SS. The boat incorporates all the details you’d expect from an outsize bowrider, and some you might not have considered at all. Most prominent is the cabin within the portside console. Here hides a berth and a half, 8 feet long, with a nicely done headliner, a microwave and synthetic teak flooring. This may be a day boat, but if opportunity knocks, a couple could overnight, no sweat.
The aft lounge converts to a sun pad, as aboard many boats, but here the lounge morphs electrically into seven different seating/reclining/ lounging positions, rather than simply up or down. The companion bench is also a chaise — or seats three facing abeam.
At the helm, I noticed a pair of small displays bracketing the wheel. These are the accessory “switches,” though they aren’t switches in the traditional sense. Instead, Monterey fitted the 328SS with a multiplex system that allows you to scroll through and select the functions you want to operate. You can call up any function on either display. These are wired through separate circuits for redundant reliability. Such networked switching reduces the amount of wiring and makes troubleshooting simpler. It also makes the electrical system more robust by reducing the chance of chafe or corrosion. More proof Monterey sees that the future is now: The engine controls are mounted on a nifty pedestal, and the Volvo joystick is incorporated into the helm. I found using the ’stick at the dock more comfortable than aboard other boats, where its location seemed an afterthought. At the wet bar, I admired the way the split solid-surface lid for the sink leaves a gap in the middle. It makes it easy to scrape waste into the sink, without having to remove the buffet from the top to do so. Beneath are stowage and the refrigerator.
Forward, I liked the anchor setup, with its chute and scuff plate. More stainless. Better still, there is a chain stop to take the strain of the windlass drum, a feature many boats lack. The bow lounge itself is capacious, offering seating without knee-knocking your crewmates, and armrests for longer lounging sojourns.
The reasons for the 328SS great ride go beyond its simply having a deep-V hull. Extra pains were taken by the Monterey’s design team to make the keel extra-sharp, which is harder to mold but better for tracking and soft landings. Additionally, the displacement-to-bottom-area ratio was refined, Monterey carefully distributing weight over the wetted surface that supports the boat while on plane. And an in-depth weight study was performed, resulting in placing the longitudinal center of gravity in just the right spot. all of this combined to make a boat that isn’t slowed much by a head sea, climbs following seas like a mountain goat, tracks wonderfully (even with waves quartering from astern, the toughest condition in which to maintain a course) and, perhaps best of all, provided me with that intangible experience of balance, of feeling as one with the boat while at the helm and charging along in the whitecaps.
Hull design is largely based on the successes of the past, with many new boats riding tried-and-true old hulls. That’s fine, and it makes good business sense. But the 328SS proves the merit of taking things a bit further, evolving the shape rather than resting on drawing-board laurels.
SPECIFICATION












