I'd just tow it. If you adjust the length of the towline properly the dinghy will "surf" on your stern wave and you'll never "feel" it behind you. For close quarter maneuvering/docking, just "suck" it up tight to the transom.
If memory serves me, the 270 has a built in swim ladder/platform for easy of boarding. If you have to have it aboard, Joe's plan is about the best you can do. Mark, Gratis (6115) NOLA From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of [email protected] Sent: Wednesday, June 02, 2010 8:54 AM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [IC27A] Dinghy I would think the easiest way would be to rig a bridal (1 bow and 2 stern) and run a line from your jib halyard. Then you could raise and lower with the aid of a winch and put it on the fore deck. Joe McCary Aeolus II West River, MD Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry _____ From: "mkeller23173" <[email protected]> Date: Wed, 02 Jun 2010 10:58:47 -0000 To: <[email protected]> Subject: [IC27A] Dinghy Hey folks, Looking for some creative dinghy transport solutions for our C270. We sailed to Oxford, MD this weekend with our 7'6" dinghy deflated on deck. Once at anchor, I dragged it to the stern and blew it up. It worked ok, but was not the smoothest solution. And forget about getting it back up on deck (it sat forward of the companionway on the trip over) it's too heavy to heave back up there. So it ended up being deflated and not-so-elegantly tied to the stern, but that was roughly a 50 minute process I don't want to drag it, my guess is we'll loose 1 to 1.5 knots. Don't particularly want davits as the boat budget has been blown on the autopilot this year and I feel that might be overkill for our 27 foot boat. I know there's only so many ways to bring a dinghy with you, but aside from deflating it or davits, am I missing some creative solution? Thanks, Mike C270 - Detente - #313
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