Veebyes2 wrote:Good luck on finding a 15kt/400mile range boat under 40' long. At 260gal capacity the Albin carries as much fuel as many larger twin engined boats which have to sacrifice human space for engine/fuel tank space.

In two foot seas my A32 Sportfish has a 400 mile range at 17kt cruise with 20% fuel to spare.
17knots = 19.56mph
At 17kts I burn 10.1 GPH. That's 1.93 miles per gallon.
I hold 260 gallons of fuel (two 130 gallon tanks, standard on most 32 Albins).
With 20% of fuel as a reserve, I realistically have 208 gallons of fuel to burn.
208 X 1.93mpg = 401 mile range
In a more realistic view, here is reality- Here on Long Island, the tip of the Hudson Canyon is about a 70 mile run from Fire Island Inlet. The seas are not often calm. We usually have swells, waves or waves on top of swells. Sometimes we have confused seas with waves out of the SouthWest and Swells out of the East. I usually cruise at 18.5 to 19kts in most of those conditions (that's the best part about an Albin- you can cruise through almost anything without having to slow down). At that cruise the 70 mile run usually takes around four hours on my 32' Sportfish. Upon arrival to the canyon I can always anticipate burning only 1/3 of ONE of my tanks. That's 43 gallons to travel 70 miles in four hours or 1.62 miles per gallon. That leaves me with a range of 339 miles in moderate to heavy seas at 18.5 to 19kts. I suppose I could throttle down to 15 to 17 knots to increase my range and/or conserve fuel but since the boat cuts through the slop so nicely there is no reason to prolong the time it takes to get out there.
Hope these numbers help. I guess it all depends on what you plan to do once you get out there. If you need a ton of extra fuel for trolling and scouting around then the quick-fix answer to your concerns is just to bring along a collapsible portable fuel tank to replenish what you burn on the way out there. You can carry an extra 50 gallons of fuel with you and then you have the range that you desire.