A recent thread ('outboard for inflatable dinghy') garnered general agreement on going with a smaller and thus lighter engine for dinghy use. Certainly a small engine tends to have plenty of power for normal dinghy purposes, one doesn't need to be able to plane a dinghy to and from docks or shores. However, a friend of mine asked about the relative value of a dinghy and motor as additional auxilliary power for that time when the main engine quits in a situation where there is no wind or manuevering needed to tight for sail.I would be interested to hear thoughts from the forum on whether a larger outboard might be justified with the back-up power consideration in mind.My buddy and I had a charter boat run out of fuel and then were subsequently becalmed in Rosario Strait (in the San Juans). The current was carrying us toward a tricky passage rather than down the middle of the strait as we desired. While a chase boat was being sent from Anacortes, WA (by the Victoria, BC charter company), we kept the 28' Catalina from being swept into the passage by towing it with the dinghy. Lesson learned: Don't trust the check-out man when he says "The fuel gauge isn't working, don't worry, the fuel tanks are full, I filled them myself" The charter company paid for the chase boat and also knocked a day off our charter price for the inconvenience. It was an adventure 