Dingy wheels

Seastoke

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So we have a a 2.6 ,3D light weight , dingy with a 3.5 Tohatsu engine . We can carry reasonably easy for short distances, but it’s unstable . I would like to pull it up the beach which could be stony . So have any of you guys tried and tested any . Thanks for any replies SS.
 
My dinghy wheels started life on a supermarket trolley.
They are only any good for relatively smooth hard surfaces.
.
 
Dingy wheels will always be that - small damp and well, Dingy.
Try asking for Dinghy wheels instead and your life will be utterly transformed. ;)
 
This just looks like a copy of the Seago set-up, but cheaper

Compact Dinghy Launching Wheels With Detaching Bracket
Being able to remove the wheels sounds great in theory, but how often are you going to do it, really? Then there's the time when you're in a hurry, and think you've put them on properly, but one goes for a swim.

I have similar wheels to those above. They work fine on hard surfaces, and even sand, but I reckon anything less than a full-width roller will struggle on a shingle beach
 
You can not get away from the fact that larger wheels mean smoother operation on rough terrain. OP mentions rocky beach. But the larger they are the more difficult to arrange for stowage.
As a matter of interest I use an ali dinghy (rowed) with wheels mounted permanently upwards so only used with dinghy upside down. Tows nicely 400m home with a mobility scooter. perhaps not much help to OP. ol'will
 
I have the type with 8" pneumatic wheels and stainless steel struts. A bit more cumbersome than the little plastic hobbies, but much better on land. When deployed they project below the outboard, so I usually put them down in deep water and the just drive the boat ( heavy, tatty grp) straight up the slip and step out onto dry land.
 
I
I have these from Amazon but they’re widely available. They add no bulk, sit either side of the outboard. Work fine on beaches, gravel, sand, concrete.
I have got to disagree with both of you, they are totally useless in shingle or sand or mud. They only work on a flat, well laid concrete surface, I have them on my inflatable but gave up using them. I went back to using a light weight wide tyre trolley.
 
I have the type with 8" pneumatic wheels and stainless steel struts. A bit more cumbersome than the little plastic hobbies, but much better on land. When deployed they project below the outboard, so I usually put them down in deep water and the just drive the boat ( heavy, tatty grp) straight up the slip and step out onto dry land.
Yes, you need a wide inflated tyre for shingle, sand, and mud.
 
As others say those with inflatable wheels work much better - yes a bit more cumbersome and expensive but they work bettter.
I have a set of

EasyFold Boat Launching Wheels – Stainless Steel​

available from many sources

Those Seago ones are the business but more expensive

But like shanemax says a trolley is a better bet if you have somewhere to store it
 
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