Do you have an inflatable dink or a hard one ? Pro's and cons please ! mostly im curious about towing issues.
Are they the same size?We own both a hard sailing dinghy and an inflatable RIB. The RIB wins hands down. It tows well and is infinitely more stable making it considerably more safe for the family. We can also carry tons more gear and humans than we can in the hard dink..
...but my wife has balance problems, arthritis, and joint replacements. For us, an inflatable is best.Years ago I was with a friend the dealer for Avons (out of my basement) in my town. And over those years I have towed a Livingston, a sailing Minto (for the east coast, like a Dyer Dink), an Easy Rider Canoe/Kayak and for the most part different types of Avon inflatables. My favorite hands down is the Avon Rovers which have an air floor....but the Redstart and Redcrest I like as well.
For towing, the Livingston is an anchor for the most part and slowed my H40 almost two knots off cruising speed. Although I have two sailing Mintos and they are a delight to sail or row, the don't tow worth beans...and they tend to take in water through the center board. I suspect many center boarders will ship water if towed hard (over speed). The canoe is a delight but very tipsy and doesn't handle large loads. It gets left at home all the time. When Zodiac who invented them and Avon came out with inflatable floors, I sorta tested drag on my H380. They towed very well (if you used the towing rings and make a bridle) and did not reduce cruising speed.
I now have a H27 and have only towed my present Avon once but it appears to not decrease my boat speed at all.
One thing to consider, at least with an Avon inflatable is that their warranty life is ten years--but many Avons keep going better then the Engergy Bunny. There are a number of Avons in my harbor that are over twenty years old. Divide the number of times you use your dinghy per year into ten years and what will it cost you? Over the years my Avon has been the cheapest form of a dinghy to use. And I agree with Maine Sail, they hold more and seem to be much safer then other types of dinghies.
Disclosure: I am not an AVon or other type of inflatable salesman anymore nor do I have any connection with any boat company of any type. BTW, Defender has new but last year's model of different types of inflatables are very good prices.