I am looking at an INMAR as a tender for my sailboat anyone have any experience with them. Here is the boat I am looking at http://www.inmarinflatables.com/inmar-240H-TS-8-0-air-floor-tender-inflatable-p/240h-ts.htm any opinion is appreciated.
Two people very little CargoWell it is an inflatable so there are all those issues. Additionally it would help if you could answer the following:
how many people max or cargo will you have to transport?
Motor or oars for power? Oars are an instant no go BTW as inflatables just don't make good row boats.
What size motor are you going to put on it (HP)?
do you plan to use the tender to kedge off in an emergency or use it as an abandon ship capability?
You have a 26' boat, where do you intend to store the tender when not in use? inside or tow or on deck, other?
How far do you usually go in the tender?
What is the max distance you need to go (non-emergency) in the tender?
Are you planning for storing gasoline on deck?
I know that is why I'm a little worried I can get a Mercury Air for a bit more but I liked the way this one sounded.Never heard of 'em, which is strange because I have a thing for rubber boats!
How do I put this.....Me and my wife are not little people LOL we are both larger and so we need a tender that can hold some weight. Also there is the money/cost that is why we were leaning towards inflatables. So if we went with an inflatable we should get a small gas engine and is there any more recommendations in regards to what we should look for in an inflatable, unless someone knows of a dinghy that will hold right around 900 to 1000 pounds and is in a 1k price range that is not inflatable .OK if you are going to try an row an inflatable bring lots of beer as you will get frustrated and tired. They don't push through the water nearly as easily as a hardshell.
Electric will take a pretty sizable battery, how do you charge it and what do you do when it dies at the dock and you need to get back to the ship? stowing oars "just in case" is a real PITA.
If you really are considering it as a life raft then consider needing to go quite some distance to reach land. I chose a sailing/rowing hardshell for just that reason (and it is fun to sail when at anchor!)
A 30' sailboat with davits will have to be pretty beamy for her size to accommodate anything over an 8' tender. Getting into a slip with a tender on the davits wider than the boat presents some issue. Also consider not being able to get right up to the dock due to the tender sticking out from the aft if you back into the slip. and what is the viability to the rear when the tender is on the davits. My 5' wife could not see aft when we tried this. Course when we put it on the fore deck she could not see forward either so consider the rest of the crew when you explore this issue. And don't forget the aft nav light and wither it will be visable or need relocated.
Sorry Salishermaid, but what's an "AB"I was originally planning on getting an AB, but after looking at the INMAR I decided there wasn't enough difference to justify the extra cost of the AB.