Thanks for the gift of your thoughts and experiences Ben.
I respect them.

I am not using the Dinghy-Tow now, and do not feel
need to defend it.. Everything is a compromise in some respect.

I have had two boats with heavy Davits, including my current
one.

My Dinghy-Tow was bought in 2004 and I first bought it
after a lot of research and reading every internet reference to
them and the reviews of about 30 folks that had them on 
both Monohulls and on Powerboats.  

The unit I got does not have any "TUBES".
Mine has heavy SQUARE STAINLESS STOCK for Arms with an 
outside dimension of an inch or inch and an eighth.  These arms
only about 42 inches long and anchor to the stern, by stainless,
& are used at an angle when hauling the dinghy. 

DInghy is anchored in place by the lifting block and
tackle.  It is secure as it has stainless steel mounting brackets 
mounted to backing plates on both the dinghy and the stern. 
NOTE:  I was using the Davit to lift the dinghy stern
and arms on Angel Louise and found it even better supported.

To install them properly and derive the benefit of the product
you have to have a minimum width of the dinghy stern and on
space between the arms to the stern of your boat or they are 
being misapplied and may have the attributes some have 
reported. 

But installed on our two boats the dinghy rode fine in four
trips up and down the ICW and offshore between Main 
& Florida and in the Atlantic and Caribbean. The setup
was instrumental in un-grounding on five occasions.

We would take off the engine from the Dinghy in passages
(as I wanted the dinghy to have as few stresses on its
stern as possible but we would leave it hooked up in 
normal use.)

YMMV but I would prefer the DT over the Davits as a boarding 
wave can wash off out of a dinghy on the dinghy tow. Similar
to the connections on some swim platforms of power boats
where he dinghy is carried on its side.

I have talked to Davit Manufacturers at  boat shows
they have told me their share of horrors on boats that 
had dinghies flooded on in the Davits. No davit
is made to hold a boarding wave and if one hits a boat
in a dinghy in Davits, the force of the heavy weight and 
angle can break stuff too. 

We originally took off the arms from the stern of Angel Louise
as we were concerned when we got down to 
Martinique about natives that would steal dinghies that 
were not locked.  Everyone in the Caribe lifts and locks 
their dinghy. We decided we needed to pull our dinghy on board 
each night and so (since we had a back deck that would
hold our dinghy) we did that for the last year.  We
are currently thinking about remounting the arms on
the dinghy tow brackets during our time before heading
across the Atlantic in 9 months, as it is much faster to 
launch the dingy and easy to pull of any grounding.

Again, that is just my model of Dinghy Tow and my 
installation and experience I am discussing. 

Thanks again for your thoughts.

Ed & Sue Kelly aboard USSV Angel Louise
DC Based SKYPE Phone # (202) 657-6357 please leave message for us
You can see map and travel progress at http://tinyurl.com/EdandSue
















On Aug 27, 2010, at 10:08 PM, Ben Okopnik wrote:

On Fri, Aug 27, 2010 at 09:04:06PM -0400, Ed Kelly wrote:
> We liked our dinghy tow a lot.  If you look at their
> web page at www.dinghy-tow.com there is a lot of
> the physics explained. Ours was used constantly for
> 5 years without failure.
> 
> We did install ours ourself and paid attention to the
> details.  We also put Boeshield on all parts in contact
> with salt water, and never had any rust.
> 
> Its still in great shape.  We pulled our dinghy across some
> turbulent seas and in storms with severe weather, without
> a complaint and only compliments... That is why those
> who have used them are generally proponents.  But you
> can do as you want and thats the reason everyone
> has their own boat.
> 
> By the way, we had read a report of cruisers who had taken
> their dinghy-tow to Europe and reported good luck in a serious
> north sea storm.
> The dinghy is kept almost as secure as it would be on deck, and
> way more secure than it would be in davits.

Ed, there are a lot of folks who like their Dinghy-Tow; fair enough, and
I can understand that being told that something you've paid a lot of
money for isn't perfect can really sting. But to claim that it's more
secure than a good pair of davits isn't reasonable. Of course, if you're
comparing it to a pair of cheap disposable davits of the sort I've seen
here and there, you might have some point - but it doesn't compare to a
well-made set, and never can. E.g., when I finally do get around to
welding mine up, they'll be heavy-wall 2" stainless tubing welded
through my stern rail in line with the stanchions where the rail crosses
them - and when the dinghy is griped in against the pudding and has
_zero_ movement to it, it's essentially an indestructible single unit.

The D-T, by contrast, allows a very large amount of movement, and is
made of skinny little tubes that'll collapse with any significant side
loading. Now, I will admit that I'm just a humble certified welder - not
a welding engineer - but if I was given the job of designing something
that would carry up to 500 lbs of dinghy that was supposed to be
pitching, yawing, sheering, lifting, and all the rest in the seas that
can result in a storm, I would have used something a whole lot beefier
than what the D-T offers. Somebody just _might_ get away with using one
while sailing to Europe - stranger exceptions have been known to happen
- but it certainly isn't something that's going to become regular
practice. On the same level, I saw a video of a Gemini catamaran being
taken across the pond by the owner of the company; at one point, he
looks at the weather to windward, and says something like, "shit, we're
all going to die." He'd been testing, improving, and sailing those boats
for years, but there's nothing quite like the ocean for really putting
the screws to what you think works - especially those cute gadgets that
looked so fine in the calm, flat waters where you "tested" them
originally.

But, as always, that's just my $0.01 x 2. Your mileage may vary.


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