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On Feb 26, 7:10*pm, Bruce wrote:
Frogwatch wrote: Smaller sailboats like my 28' one still need a dinghy for the occupants to get to shore when anchored. *I have tried inflatables and rigid ones and neither worked well. *Inflatables require a motor because they row so poorly and the rigid ones take up too much room on deck. *Even my nesting dinghy takes up too much room on deck. *This is why I am interested in the Porta-bote but do I really have to spend $1500 to find it may not work well? What I'd like to see would be a dinghy that assembles sorta like a tent as an inverted tensile structure on a frame with stiffeners of aluminum across it's beam. *Fiberglass rods would insert into sleeves like a tent and then into a hard bow piece and into a rigid stern piece. *A seat would go across to stiffen it with maybe rigid Al bottom pieces going across. Floatation would be built into the rigid stern piece and into the seat. *The fabric would either have to be very tough or very cheap to replace like Tyvek. Of course, it should have a keel so it can be rowed and to stiffen it so it does not "squirm" when it is rowed. Maybe after I am bored with x-ray stuff I'll work on this. Tyvek can only be exposed to the sun for six months max. *You may have seen it flapping in the wind on unsold/unfinished homes. I went to the St Pete boat show just to see a porta-bote (ok, I went to see another sailboat too) and really liked it. The reality is that it might be hard to solve all the problems that company has solved and do it in a reasonable time and cost so when I get over being cheap I will probably buy one. |
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