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Sal's Dad March 10th 05 04:58 PM

David wrote:
My day is ruined now.


I know the feeling!

I think the market for this might be NOT as a primary dinghy for cruisers,
but for day-sailing. Who wants to drag a dinghy around
"just-in-case-we-want-to-stop-at-that-nice-beach" or
"because-the-YC-launch-stops-at-7" ? How about power-boaters?


The ideal dinghy would be:
Lightweight for hoisting out of the water.

OK, fabric and lightweight poles. As soon as you go to Hypalon or whatever,
weight and bulk go way up.

Would carry 3 people

How about 2? Not ideal, but useful

would have floatation

Air tubes/sponsons - no bulk or weight, double as fenders, design in so as
to add stability. Klepper sponsons are used to "firm up" the hull, after
the frame is inserted loosely

would row well ( I mean for at least 1 Km)

Yup - if it could row REALLY well, this whole concept would be a winner,
regardless of other vices. I think if you discard the motor mount, you can
create something nice.

Easy to assemble

Yup

would store in a small volume (1m X 1m X .33 m)

Or 72" x 18" x 4" (berth sized) - with a bottom panel this big, could have
a light 10' x4' double-chined hull

To these requirements, I'll add - beachable, and easy to patch!

Hmmm - next step is research, to find all the similar offerings over the
years - identify technical and marketing issues with each... then
prototypes with cheap fabric (blue tarp, anyone?) and tent poles...

Could be a fun project!

Sal's Dad



Rodney Myrvaagnes March 11th 05 03:04 AM

On 10 Mar 2005 07:21:19 -0800, wrote:


Bob Medico wrote:
Looks like it might be suited to clandesine activities.

Antonio wrote:

I'm an individual firm which has developed and patent a method that
permits to built boats that can be dismantled, still not present on
the international market. This Technique permits in 10 minutes to

get,
starting from a structure with small dimensions ( as big as an
overnight bag), a rigid boat. We are searching for firms interested

in
buying the patent or in the collaboration to develop the idea. To

see
on of the application of the technique you can visit the
www.natanti-smontabili.it .


My day is ruined now. After seeing this I'll spend all my time
thinking about it instead of what I should be doing.
Compare his concept to other folding boats.
Porta-Boat is a good and well done concept but is still too unwieldy to
assemble on the deck of a small sailboat. When folded, it is too long
to store anywhere on my 28' boat except against the lifelines where it
would produce too much windage.
Nesting Dinghys are another concept and I actually built the Two-Paw 9
to see if it would work well for me. It is "ok" but has many problems.
It is lightweight but is still unwieldy to assemble. For storage, it
sits on my foredeck and covers my foreward hatch. It is also a problem
to see over when steering while sitting.
Inflateables you can forget, they dont row worth anything and rowing is
a necessity for me.
Inflateable kayaks might work but have too little capacity to be
useful.
Other folding boats I have seen are all too long when folded.

The ideal dinghy would be:
Lightweight for hoisting out of the water.
Would carry 3 people
would have floatation
would row well ( I mean for at least 1 Km)
Easy to assemble
would store in a small volume (1m X 1m X .33 m)

I guess for completeness I should add our folding pram. It was made in
England and imported by a guy in Annapolis DBI Britannia Boats. I
haven't seen him at a boat show in some years, so I expect he went out
of business. We bought it in 1996 at the January boat show.

It is a normal-looking pram, 8' 6" long, with fabric hinges at the
chines, removable transoms and thwarts, and a piece to facilitate
outboard mounting. It also has a daggerboard trunk that could be
opened and used with a sail rig.

The two of us can get it on and off the boat assembled, and we unfold
and fold it across the cabin top. we stow it in a quarter berth, not
on deck.

We have used it with a 2 hp Yamaha, but we now row it. It rows as well
as any 8'6" pram. I can easily row it more than 1 km.

We don't use the dinghy every time we anchor, but it isn't a big deal
to get it out if we want it. We have had it for

Rodney Myrvaagnes Opinionated old geezer

Brutal dictators are routinely reelected by 90+%
margins. Only in a truly advanced democracy can
one win an election by a negative 600,000 votes.

Antonio March 13th 05 11:22 AM

Tank you to all for now.
I have need of an industry for productions. You know ?

by

Antonio

Geoff Udy March 29th 05 01:37 PM

Here is our little contribution to the folding boat market.....

http://www.flatoutboats.com.au/

Geoff.

"Antonio" wrote in message
om...
I'm an individual firm which has developed and patent a method that
permits to built boats that can be dismantled, still not present on
the international market. This Technique permits in 10 minutes to get,
starting from a structure with small dimensions ( as big as an
overnight bag), a rigid boat. We are searching for firms interested in
buying the patent or in the collaboration to develop the idea. To see
on of the application of the technique you can visit the
www.natanti-smontabili.it .




rhys March 30th 05 06:35 AM

On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:37:53 +0800, "Geoff Udy" geoffudy at
iinet.net.au wrote:

Here is our little contribution to the folding boat market.....

http://www.flatoutboats.com.au/

Geoff.



Interesting. What's the carrying capacity and how big a motor can be
put on it?

Any stability trials in ocean water, or is it strictly for inland
lakes and calm bays?

R.


"Antonio" wrote in message
. com...
I'm an individual firm which has developed and patent a method that
permits to built boats that can be dismantled, still not present on
the international market. This Technique permits in 10 minutes to get,
starting from a structure with small dimensions ( as big as an
overnight bag), a rigid boat. We are searching for firms interested in
buying the patent or in the collaboration to develop the idea. To see
on of the application of the technique you can visit the
www.natanti-smontabili.it .




Geoff Udy March 30th 05 09:37 AM

It is designed for mainly calm waters but we have given it a real pounding
in medium sized swell with very good results.
It can handle an outboard up to 8hp which with two medium sized people
onboard will reach about 27 knots.
3.3 metre version is now available and is a fantastic boat.

Geoff

"rhys" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:37:53 +0800, "Geoff Udy" geoffudy at
iinet.net.au wrote:

Here is our little contribution to the folding boat market.....

http://www.flatoutboats.com.au/

Geoff.



Interesting. What's the carrying capacity and how big a motor can be
put on it?

Any stability trials in ocean water, or is it strictly for inland
lakes and calm bays?

R.


"Antonio" wrote in message
. com...
I'm an individual firm which has developed and patent a method that
permits to built boats that can be dismantled, still not present on
the international market. This Technique permits in 10 minutes to get,
starting from a structure with small dimensions ( as big as an
overnight bag), a rigid boat. We are searching for firms interested in
buying the patent or in the collaboration to develop the idea. To see
on of the application of the technique you can visit the
www.natanti-smontabili.it .






Geoff Udy March 30th 05 09:39 AM

Sorry,forgot to mention the carrying capacity of 300kgs

Geoff.

"rhys" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 29 Mar 2005 20:37:53 +0800, "Geoff Udy" geoffudy at
iinet.net.au wrote:

Here is our little contribution to the folding boat market.....

http://www.flatoutboats.com.au/

Geoff.



Interesting. What's the carrying capacity and how big a motor can be
put on it?

Any stability trials in ocean water, or is it strictly for inland
lakes and calm bays?

R.


"Antonio" wrote in message
. com...
I'm an individual firm which has developed and patent a method that
permits to built boats that can be dismantled, still not present on
the international market. This Technique permits in 10 minutes to get,
starting from a structure with small dimensions ( as big as an
overnight bag), a rigid boat. We are searching for firms interested in
buying the patent or in the collaboration to develop the idea. To see
on of the application of the technique you can visit the
www.natanti-smontabili.it .






rhys March 30th 05 07:13 PM

On Wed, 30 Mar 2005 16:39:55 +0800, "Geoff Udy" geoffudy at
iinet.net.au wrote:

Sorry,forgot to mention the carrying capacity of 300kgs

Geoff.


Thanks. It looks like an interesting addition to the concept of
folding boats, and the material might be of greater interest to some
than the plastic of the PortaBote. Which is not a knock against the
PortaBote...it's had a lot of practical use and seems to meet a need.

A lot of us contemplating long-term cruising are looking for RIB
replacements or for a second "ship's boat". This gets bookmarked.

R.


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