Our RIB is fantastic. As a dinghy user, you would never go back to anything 
else. It can hold an amazing amount of s.. (cough) stuff. I think it once held 
6 people and two big dogs. It can cruise all day at 16-18 knots and has enough 
grunt to tow a big boat or a kid in a tube. It is very stable and you can step 
right up from the dinghy to the boat without stretching.
So why NOT have one? It can’t be taken aboard and it is a lot of drag to tow. I 
figure it costs on average ½ a knot.


Joe Della Barba
DCSI
410-966-7255



From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Dennis C. 
via CnC-List
Sent: Friday, August 18, 2017 1:49 PM
To: CnClist <[email protected]>
Cc: Dennis C. <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Dinghy Recommendations?

The reason the West dinghy fell apart is probably because it was glued.  It 
also may have been Hypalon which is no longer available.  Most dinghies now are 
thermowelded.  Make sure any inflatable you buy is thermowelded.

In a recent thread, a lister gave the advice on dinghy motors "go big or go 
small".  Good advice.  I have a 1980's vintage Evinrude 7.5 for my dinghy.  
Bought it cheap from a buddy.  While it will make the dinghy scoot, because of 
no wake zones and anchorage courtesy I rarely have the opportunity to "scoot".  
It's heavy and while the Admiral and I are very adept at raising and lowering 
it on/off the dinghy with a halyard, it's still a pain due to its weight.  
Lately the motor has stayed in storage and I've simply rowed everywhere.

If I was starting from scratch, I'd buy a lightweight motor and just putt putt 
slowly wherever.  I'd lean toward the lightest motor with both internal and 
external fuel tank I could find.

As for the type of inflatable, that depends on your usage and storage.  I find 
a wood floor inflatable suits us OK.  There are arguments for both RIB's and 
air floor inflatables.

Dennis C.
Touche' 35-1 #83
Mandeville, LA

On Fri, Aug 18, 2017 at 12:24 PM, Bruce Whitmore via CnC-List 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Hello all,

The last thing I want to do is to start "The Great Dinghy War".  [*;) winking]

That said, our '94 came with two outboards, one 6.5 hp Honda 4 stroke mounted 
the the stern railing and an old Torqeedo.  Haven't even gotten around to 
testing either one yet - too many other things on my list!  Thre was a West 
Marine inflatable dinghy folded up under the v-berth, but the floor had 
entirely peeled out of it and is was in really poor shape.

If we want to go on any kind of getaway (even a local one), I'm going to need a 
dinghy since transient slips here in the Tampa area are darned expensive.

I'm really liking the idea of a porta-boat, especially given the ability to 
store it on deck easily.  I've seen a couple of you comment very positively 
about them.  I am also finding relatively few detractors.  That said I want to 
keep my mind wide open as I way the options.

I've read a number of articles that really push for a RIB with a 15hp yamaha as 
being the "standard" in the Caribbean due to combination of dryness, speed, and 
ability to get parts.  However, in our harbor, we cannot keep a dinghy in the 
water next to our boat, so I think that may strike a RIB unless we hang dinghy 
davits from the stern which would probably force us into a bigger dock (which 
may not even be available in our marina).

So,what dinghy, what size, and what outboard size/type?

Bruce Whitmore

(847) 404-5092<tel:(847)%20404-5092> (mobile)
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>

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