magic mark
New member
The boat I just bought ( Dufour Arpege 30) came with a decent inflatable with a pull start. My question is; is there any way I can make it harder to steal for those occasions when we go to restaurant or exploring?
That's what I have.i once discussed his with the owner of a chandlery. He made a long length of guard rail wire with a loop at each end. I pass the wire through loops on the boat and secure with a padlock.
?Only use stainless steel padlocks and constantly maintain them with WD40....or the key will get stuck in it and it will look even more inviting
and means a lot of people trying to get ashore trample through the offending dinghy.If you’re going to use a length of s/s wire and lock your tender to the dock/pontoon here’s a plea to make it a LONG one.
One of my pet hates is tenders tied up on short lines. It’s rude and selfish.
We don’t ever lock ours in UK/French/CI waters (but the outboard is locked to the dinghy)It must depend on where you sail. I never give it a thought.
We have an electric outboard. i can’t understand why the manufacturers don’t include electronic security - a proximity tag for example - which would make it worthless to the criminal fraternity. Cant be hard surely?We use a long piece of stainless steel wire and a good padlock. A friend once told me he was buying a new outboard, the next time I saw him his outboard was matt black and scratched. I laughed and asked why he'd changed his mind? Very quietly, he explained that he hadn't, but as the new shinny outboard looked such a target, he had painted it with blackboard paint and and scratched it with his thumbnail! Fooled me!
Allan
It’s fairly easy to lock the shaft and battery of a Torqueedo to the dinghy - we take the tiller with us as it’s very light.We have an electric outboard. i can’t understand why the manufacturers don’t include electronic security - a proximity tag for example - which would make it worthless to the criminal fraternity. Cant be hard surely?
I live in Malta and the previous owner used to leave not only the tender unlocked but also the boat. I intend sailing to Sicily next summer. How have you locked yours? Cables?We don’t ever lock ours in UK/French/CI waters (but the outboard is locked to the dinghy)
However I’ve heard that tenders regularly disappear in the islands and waters we’re heading for. A long length of s/s wire is on the shopping list. On the mother ship, the tender is lifted onto davits so it’s much harder to swim out and nick it.
I think that may be Müllerian_mimicryWe use a long piece of stainless steel wire and a good padlock. A friend once told me he was buying a new outboard, the next time I saw him his outboard was matt black and scratched. I laughed and asked why he'd changed his mind? Very quietly, he explained that he hadn't, but as the new shinny outboard looked such a target, he had painted it with blackboard paint and and scratched it with his thumbnail! Fooled me!
Allan