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#1
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Hi,
(Been a while since I've been he wave to the ol' regulars!) I'm thinking of trading my Walker Bay for an inflatable (then using the WB for lake fishing), for the tender dinghy for Far Cove, my Catalina 36. I'm NOT currently looking at brand-names - I first want to nail down what KIND I want. 70% of the time it will be carrying 1-2 people, using an electric motor. 20% same thing, but rowed. I have a Merc 9.9 4-stroke (light for a 4-stroke...) that I MIGHT want to hang off the back, which creates the dilemma: I'm torn between basically "like-for-like": A small, 8-9ft flat (inflatable?) bottom, like a Sea Eagle. I'll be gaining stability and load-carrying, but losing on rowing enjoyment. Or, a bigger, 9-10ft "hard" bottom with inflatable keel that would handle the 9.9 (like a Brig). The 9.9 will spend most of it's time on the 12-ft aluminum skiff where it is now, and the inflatable will be stored on the deck of Far Cove, probably partially deflated. Comments? Does the inflatable keel help? Anybody done comparisons between various floor configurations and performance while rowing or motoring? Will the electric push the boat as well as it does the Walker Bay? Do the "bigger" (10ft...) inflatables tow as easily as a WB? Lloyd Sumpter "Far Cove" Catalina 36 "Near Cove" Walker Bay 8 |
#2
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Not sure what to recommend about inflatables. Spending last winter cruising
farther south of here on our 41' Gulfstar, we used a 12' Porta-Bote. This is a folding boat that is very light and seems almost impossible to poke holes in. Seemed very stable in fairly good sized waves though be careful towing at sea in larger waves as they can fill with water and 'sink' though they have positive flotation and are recoverable. We like this boat...your 9.9 motor will make in absolutely fly...maybe too much power. I have a 6HP 4-stroke Nissan on ours and with one person it is very fast. Cost with motor was less than inflatable without motor. I think there are some pictures on our web site (www.seawing.net). You will find information on the manufacturers web site too. Glenn. s/v Seawing www.seawing.net "Lloyd Sumpter" wrote in message news ![]() Hi, (Been a while since I've been he wave to the ol' regulars!) I'm thinking of trading my Walker Bay for an inflatable (then using the WB for lake fishing), for the tender dinghy for Far Cove, my Catalina 36. I'm NOT currently looking at brand-names - I first want to nail down what KIND I want. 70% of the time it will be carrying 1-2 people, using an electric motor. 20% same thing, but rowed. I have a Merc 9.9 4-stroke (light for a 4-stroke...) that I MIGHT want to hang off the back, which creates the dilemma: I'm torn between basically "like-for-like": A small, 8-9ft flat (inflatable?) bottom, like a Sea Eagle. I'll be gaining stability and load-carrying, but losing on rowing enjoyment. Or, a bigger, 9-10ft "hard" bottom with inflatable keel that would handle the 9.9 (like a Brig). The 9.9 will spend most of it's time on the 12-ft aluminum skiff where it is now, and the inflatable will be stored on the deck of Far Cove, probably partially deflated. Comments? Does the inflatable keel help? Anybody done comparisons between various floor configurations and performance while rowing or motoring? Will the electric push the boat as well as it does the Walker Bay? Do the "bigger" (10ft...) inflatables tow as easily as a WB? Lloyd Sumpter "Far Cove" Catalina 36 "Near Cove" Walker Bay 8 |
#3
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On Tue, 30 Aug 2005 07:35:23 -0700, Lloyd Sumpter wrote:
Hi, (Been a while since I've been he wave to the ol' regulars!) I'm thinking of trading my Walker Bay for an inflatable (then using the WB for lake fishing), for the tender dinghy for Far Cove, my Catalina 36. Thanks for the replies: I've seen the porta-bote, and it's not what I'm looking for. I bought a Brig Dingo D285, and so far I'm very impressed. It has a "solid" floor (5 piece plywood linked together) with an inflatable keel that goes all the way back to the transom. The Bad News is the oars really suck. They're too short, and PINNED so you can't feather them. I think I can modify "proper" oarlocks to be female and fit over the pin, then use some decent oars and it should be OK. The Good News is that it goes GREAT with an electric! I bought a Minn Kota Max50T (50-lb thrust, Maximizer cct) and with one person on board, it goes 5.8 knots WOT and 3.7knots at 50%. That's not bad at all: in fact I'm guessing it's at least as good as a 2-4hp engine. Kinda fun pulling donuts, jumping my own wake, making NO noise! ![]() I COULD use up to a 10hp outboard if I wanted to go Really Fast and be Really Noisy. And, it fits on Far Cove's foredeck like it was made for it. (Though it's a LITTLE heavy for simply throwing overboard to launch like I did with the Walker Bay) So... anybody wanna buy a well-used Walker Bay 8 c/w 30-lb electric and oars? Lloyd Sumpter "Far Cove" Catalina 36 "Near Cove III" Brig 285 |
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