munster1967
Well-Known Member
In the process of upgrading my sib for something a bit bigger. Currently have air floor flat bottom.( Any advantage to buying with a keel ??) I don't use in the sea , only inland waterways.
I had one with an inflatable keel and found that it "tracked" better than one without.
thanks for your reply I can't buy a rib as I have no where to keep a trailer. I live in a terraced house.How far do you want to upgrade?! A flat floor SIB is generally very skittish and slammy, fine as a tender to go to the beach but not much else. A V-keeled SIB will be better, but a small RIB with a hard hull even better! I personally don't see the point in large SIB's - many people seem to end up putting on them on trailers anyway as they are a bit too large to unpack/pack, in which case might as well have a small RIB.
Have a look at the 3D tender range, these look suitable for your stated needs. Pack up relatively small and are much lighter than some alternatives.In the process of upgrading my sib for something a bit bigger. Currently have air floor flat bottom.( Any advantage to buying with a keel ??) I don't use in the sea , only inland waterways.
Advantages to a keel versus flat bottom??Have a look at the 3D tender range, these look suitable for your stated needs. Pack up relatively small and are much lighter than some alternatives.
3D Twin V-Shape Tender.
Understood - if you definitely aren't going to trailer it then a V-keel SIB will generally be better in the water than a flat floor SIB. I just don't understand folks that buy a large SIB and immediately stick it on a trailer - you've lost the benefits of a SIB and lost the benefits you could have had with a RIB!thanks for your reply I can't buy a rib as I have no where to keep a trailer. I live in a terraced house.
You recommended a specific model without clarifying why!Yup. That’s exactly what I recommended in post 6!![]()
Thanks for your reply.Understood - if you definitely aren't going to trailer it then a V-keel SIB will generally be better in the water than a flat floor SIB. I just don't understand folks that buy a large SIB and immediately stick it on a trailer - you've lost the benefits of a SIB and lost the benefits you could have had with a RIB!
If you can it's worth having a look at a few larger SIB's in a showroom, seeing how they unpack, setup, pack down, etc. and making sure you find one that works for you and fits in whatever vehicle you need to get it into!
I think your second para probably explains the first! They seem like a good idea, then you realise just how long they take to sey up, pack down, manhandle down a slip and that with boat, o/board, fuel tank, kit all in the car there's no room for anything else and the "get a trailer" solution becomes the obvious "fix".Understood - if you definitely aren't going to trailer it then a V-keel SIB will generally be better in the water than a flat floor SIB. I just don't understand folks that buy a large SIB and immediately stick it on a trailer - you've lost the benefits of a SIB and lost the benefits you could have had with a RIB!
If you can it's worth having a look at a few larger SIB's in a showroom, seeing how they unpack, setup, pack down, etc. and making sure you find one that works for you and fits in whatever vehicle you need to get it into!
Soft inflatable boat as opposed to rigid inflatable boat. The terminology was proposed on an Internet forum (not this one) many years ago to describe boat which were entirely inflatable from rigid hulled boats with tubes. I’m not sure it was even intended to be serious when it was proposed but it seems to have stuck. So remember - what you post here might actually change world thinking (on one tiny niche issue!).I get that the thread is about inflatable dinghies but what does SIB actually stand for FMI.