I have towed this dinghy a *lot* in all kinds of weather, some much much worse 
than that video. I am not saying the dinghy cannot capsize, but it has never 
showed any signs of being even close in the kind of weather we have here in the 
Chesapeake. If it was going to flip, between it and the previous one it would 
have between 2001 and now. The dinghy would be unusable if it could not be 
towed engine on, there is no way I would be constantly getting a long shaft 15 
HP engine on and off of it every time we moved the boat. I have had my old Dyer 
flip under tow, which was a large PITA.

 

 

If I even need a dinghy I can deflate, I will likely get this thing and a 2-3 
HP engine for it. If I didn’t deflate it I would take the engine off and tie 
the bow up in the air to the stern rail, which would make capsizing a non-event.

http://www.boatstogo.com/inflatable_boat_AM365.asp

 

Joe Della Barba

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

 

Coquina

C&C 35 MK I

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Sailnomad 
via CnC-List
Sent: Wednesday, December 30, 2015 9:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Sailnomad <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Stus-List dinghy davits

 

That is good to see, and probably the norm.

 But it is like saying, 15 years of driving without a seatbelt, and nothing 
happend. I suspect most of us never had to say "I am glad I had my seatbelt on"

 

I had regular dinghys flying circles in the air like kites. I have heard of 
Life Rafts doing the same. 

I have not experienced an overturned RIB, with or without motor, but I know 
that under the right circumstances, it can happen. 

 

Now we may not wonder out under those circumstances, but still, common nautical 
wisdom generally says not to tow the dinghy with the motor on for the reasons I 
explained in the previous email.

 

Now they also say never go to the fore-deck without a PFD, always wear shoes, 
never have a beer while sailing   etc etc, and we all selectively do whatever 
we feel comfortable with.

I am probably guilty of breaking all of those rules at one time or another.

 

On a separate note, I found it to be most efficient to adjust the line such 
that the dinghy rides down your bow wave to minimize the drag. On longer trips 
with following waves having two lines in a bridle keeps the dinghy tamed.

 

Ahmet

Tabasco C&C 25

Waterdancer Irwin 43 CC

Boston, MA

 

 

On Wed, Dec 30, 2015 at 8:30 PM, Joe Della Barba via CnC-List 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

This is our dinghy under tow. In 15 years of RIB with engine-on towing I have 
never had an issue other than the drag.

http://www.dellabarba.com/sailing/dinghy.mp4

 

 

Joe Della Barba

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> 

 

Coquina


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