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#1
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Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with
me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Glenn,
First, I'm assuming you are serious, and not just trolling. These comments come from having owned a 16' open bow with an outboard like you are describing (now own a 21' I/O), and also having sailed offshore in moderate (12-18Kt winds, 2'-5' waves) and moderate+ (18- 28 kt winds, 6'-12' waves) conditions. I don't think that the drag from the boat will be the problem. We tow our 21' I/O with our 27' sailboat during the summer and it doesn't slow us down that much. At 4-6 Kts sailing speed, the drag from the tow isn't that much. A bigger problem is that you are likely to be shipping water over the bow of the towed boat in anything except benign conditions resulting in a swamped power boat and dramatically increased drag ;-) We had our 16' on San Luis reservoir one time in windy conditions. The waves were probably 2'-3' on the nose. After the first time the bow went down into a trough and the next wave came (partially) into the boat we said "enough of this" and headed in. Those waves were small compared to what we've seen off shore. The tow rope would likely make it even worse by holding the bow down as the power boat tried to come up the face of a wave. OTOH, if you had a good bilge pump, battery, solar charger etc., _and_ a custom fit heavy duty cover that was mostly waterproof and real well attached (with snaps) to the boat you might could do it. I wonder if you'd have to pay double (for two boats) at check-in time? Sure would be nice to have the powerboat down there with you to get around in. My opinions, Don W. John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net |
#3
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Hey, this could be the answer to the "do I bring the wife and kids or more
beer to the Bahamas this year" question. A trailer-boat! "Don W" wrote in message ... Glenn, First, I'm assuming you are serious, and not just trolling. These comments come from having owned a 16' open bow with an outboard like you are describing (now own a 21' I/O), and also having sailed offshore in moderate (12-18Kt winds, 2'-5' waves) and moderate+ (18- 28 kt winds, 6'-12' waves) conditions. I don't think that the drag from the boat will be the problem. We tow our 21' I/O with our 27' sailboat during the summer and it doesn't slow us down that much. At 4-6 Kts sailing speed, the drag from the tow isn't that much. A bigger problem is that you are likely to be shipping water over the bow of the towed boat in anything except benign conditions resulting in a swamped power boat and dramatically increased drag ;-) We had our 16' on San Luis reservoir one time in windy conditions. The waves were probably 2'-3' on the nose. After the first time the bow went down into a trough and the next wave came (partially) into the boat we said "enough of this" and headed in. Those waves were small compared to what we've seen off shore. The tow rope would likely make it even worse by holding the bow down as the power boat tried to come up the face of a wave. OTOH, if you had a good bilge pump, battery, solar charger etc., _and_ a custom fit heavy duty cover that was mostly waterproof and real well attached (with snaps) to the boat you might could do it. I wonder if you'd have to pay double (for two boats) at check-in time? Sure would be nice to have the powerboat down there with you to get around in. My opinions, Don W. John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net |
#4
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Tue, 24 Jan 2006 21:26:30 GMT, "John Glynn"
wrote: It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. I think your biggest risk is getting caught in large seas, particularly large following seas. The thought of having a 15 1/2 ft runabout launched off the top of a wave into the cockpit or into the stern is not a pretty picture. There is also a big risk of having the runabout capsize in heavy seas. I had a small rowing dinghy capsize while I was towing it many years ago, and the seas were no more than 3 to 4 feet. THe dinghy started surfing down a wave, buried its nose a bit, broached, and over it went. It was a lot of work recovering it, and I'd guess impossible with a larger boat. Short distances on protected water should be fine if you are careful. I saw a 50 or 60 something motor yacht towing a 24 ft Grady-White up Pine Island Sound last winter. It looked like it would make for a rather nice dinghy. |
#5
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Have you considered the consequences of being overtaken by bad weather
- a squall or an actual storm - while towing a boat large and heavy enough to damage your boat in a collision? Remember - you are talking about going off shore - not just day to day coastal cruising. I would hesitate to tow any dinghy at all when at sea. -- |
#6
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Yes, that's my concern. I was encouraged by another cruiser that's planning
to do the same and was hoping to gather some wisdom from the experience of the folks on this group. Thanks! Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net "Marc Auslander" wrote in message ... Have you considered the consequences of being overtaken by bad weather - a squall or an actual storm - while towing a boat large and heavy enough to damage your boat in a collision? Remember - you are talking about going off shore - not just day to day coastal cruising. I would hesitate to tow any dinghy at all when at sea. -- |
#7
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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In article aYwBf.441166$ki.372111@pd7tw2no,
John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net Towing anything for any significant amount of time is not recommended. -- Capt. JG @@ www.sailnow.com |
#8
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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The Seas in that area can be nasty. I know a captain of a large sport
fish who took a wave while cruising from KW to the yucatan. Sunk the boat in 30 seconds after it broke through the house. I suggest a large inflatable that can be deinflated and put in the bow for the long runs and towed for the short hauls. Jonathan Ganz wrote: In article aYwBf.441166$ki.372111@pd7tw2no, John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net Towing anything for any significant amount of time is not recommended. |
#9
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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Ed,
Sound scarry. We usually use a 12' Portabote folding dingy...though we usually stow it onboard when at sea, without folding it. We just have this boat hanging around home and have begun thinking it sure would be nice to have a larger and faster boat around for exploring. It could just be a real big pain I guess. I have been pretty concerned about how safe it could be to tow at sea...though another sailor I know in the Keys suggested it would work. Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net "Ed" wrote in message news ![]() The Seas in that area can be nasty. I know a captain of a large sport fish who took a wave while cruising from KW to the yucatan. Sunk the boat in 30 seconds after it broke through the house. I suggest a large inflatable that can be deinflated and put in the bow for the long runs and towed for the short hauls. Jonathan Ganz wrote: In article aYwBf.441166$ki.372111@pd7tw2no, John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net Towing anything for any significant amount of time is not recommended. |
#10
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Glenn,
I tow a 17 whaler but I only go to the bahamas and my 17 whaler can take 6' plus seas and even it if does swamp (Which it hasn't yet even in 6++ seas) it is not SUPPOSED to sink (Don't want to test that one...) I would not tow a lake boat to the islands, let alone to the yucatan.!!! Now if you want to tow it around the keys... no issues... you are 30 min from port at any time. Have fun and stay safe Ed Glenn A. Heslop wrote: Ed, Sound scarry. We usually use a 12' Portabote folding dingy...though we usually stow it onboard when at sea, without folding it. We just have this boat hanging around home and have begun thinking it sure would be nice to have a larger and faster boat around for exploring. It could just be a real big pain I guess. I have been pretty concerned about how safe it could be to tow at sea...though another sailor I know in the Keys suggested it would work. Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net "Ed" wrote in message news ![]() The Seas in that area can be nasty. I know a captain of a large sport fish who took a wave while cruising from KW to the yucatan. Sunk the boat in 30 seconds after it broke through the house. I suggest a large inflatable that can be deinflated and put in the bow for the long runs and towed for the short hauls. Jonathan Ganz wrote: In article aYwBf.441166$ki.372111@pd7tw2no, John Glynn wrote: Okay...so I have a crazy question for y'all. Please be patient with me...just want some of your experience/wisdom. I have been using a 12' Portabote for my dingy & thought it's not perfect, I like it. I just had an idea. I have an older 15.5' family 'speed-boat' of '70's vintage. It has a 70HP outboard, convertable top etc. We are considering sailing from the Florida Keys towards Mexico and then cruising south to Guattemalla. Had the idea of (in addition to the Portabote) towing the 15.5' boat along. I thought that it would be great to load my wife and kids into a larger faster boat to be able to explore further afield from our chosen anchorage. No, I am not one of the folks that roars through anchorages rocking everyone's home...done my share of screaming at those (given up on that now). Just thinking it would be sure handy. It will significantly slow us down our 41' Gulfstar , I know. I thought I would put the convertible top on it to prevent the collection of rainwater and install a couple large bilge-pumps and solar-panel to keep batter topped up. Please forward your honest comments and experiences...no flames please. Thanks! :-) Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net Towing anything for any significant amount of time is not recommended. |
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