billyfish
Well-Known Member
Goodness me...get used to getting wet , it's 1950s tec.
So it might be, but they're still the best IMHO.Goodness me...get used to getting wet , it's 1950s tec.
Good work Dan. My daily driver dinghy has a 5mm ply floor, and isn't an inflatable- that's all there is. So no reason why yours won't work.
I have a love-hate relationship with my Avon. For years it was my only dinghy and it's still going strong. For simplicity it's hard to beat. I don't know if I could justify the space that a larger dinghy would take up, when I only use it as a backup.
But on a choppy day when I'm getting absolutely drenched, I'm cursing it all the way to the dock...
"Never going to sink" is a pretty low bar to set for a tender!Having been with wife on boat in bad weather sitting out alongside .... the Avon was best thing ever. Yes it filled with water from the waves inside the harbour while getting ashore ... we were wet and needed to dry out by the fire in the pub each time ashore ... but being an inflatable - it was never going to sink .....
"Never going to sink" is a pretty low bar to set for a tender!
With the two tenders I now have, it's just night and day. We got the big dinghy back out the other day for the first time in months. Huge smiles all round. Using the same motor, it's twice as fast and far drier. An absolute joy to row too, although an Avon isn't bad for an inflatable.
It's horses for courses. I'm happy to have one of each.
When using the individual boards, held in place in a fabric pocket arrangement, plywood is not a good choice, and would be easily broken. Better just to use ordinary knot free timber boards. Plywood works well in broad sheets, but is not so good in relatively narrow boards - too much of the grain is running the wrong way.
Yes, Avon stopped using ply, in favour of a synthetic grey material. I wonder why?Not being rude - but Avon were producing those plywood boards for decades .... and many lasted long time ... I would guess that mine must have been 20yrs old at least by time all but one cracked.
I would think the reason Ply was used ...
in single wood - the weight would have been more having to use thicker wood. I saw a later set that were produced in synthetic material ... but of course the best now is the inflatable floor (except for price !)
Yes, Avon stopped using ply, in favour of a synthetic grey material. I wonder why?![]()
I'm looking for an additional pair of the heavy black rubber lugs which belong on the outer underside of the Redstart's tubes, in which the engine bracket fits securely.
Our current Redcrest...