Dinghy experiment #5
On 6/14/2012 7:22 AM, Tim wrote:
On Jun 14, 1:14 am, wrote:
On Wed, 13 Jun 2012 19:31:28 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:
On Jun 13, 9:11 pm, wrote:
On Sat, 9 Jun 2012 18:54:35 -0700 (PDT), Frogwatch
wrote:
On Saturday, June 9, 2012 8:38:12 PM UTC-4, Frogwatch wrote:
I've tried all kinds of dinghies for my 28' sailboat including:
8' Nautilus rigid....rowed well but was very heavy and difficult to carry on foredeck. Too small for 3 people.
12' Sevylor inflatable kayak. Paddled as if it was a wet log. Awful.
Cheapo inflatable boat. Not worth the time to inflate it.
Homebuilt 2-paw-9 2 piece nesting dinghy. Rowed great. Big enough for 4 people. Not too hard to put together but not on the foredeck. Fit poorly on foredeck and blocked my view.
This time, I bought a used 8' Porta-Bote. It rows well. It fits inside the shrouds against the cabin sides. Easy and fast to assemble on the foredeck. Lightweight. It carried 3 grown men. My dinghy experiments are over.
I found the 8' Porta-Bote locally the day before I left and quickly modified the bolts that hold the seats on to use SS spring loaded pins. When I took it to Fort Lauderdale, I wasn't really sure how I was going to get it to Marsh Harbor but Twin Air Calypso told me they would ship it freight. Surprise surprise, when I got
into the 6 seat twin engine plane, they had taken out three seats to ship my dinghy "Freight" with me next to it.
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Are you using it with an outboard motor? If so what size and type?
Can you mount an engine on a port a boat?
We have a snowbird here who uses a fold up boat every winter. He has a
5 Honda 4s on it. Actually it looks like a pretty nice rig for poking
around in the river and back in the creeks
wow!
Tim, they are actyally a fairly functional tool. I have seen an old
couple (like in their 80's) set one up and mount a small motor, take off
for a day on the river. They had a ten footer, they pulled it right off
the top of their Volvo wagon, and were on the water in about 10 minutes...
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