I'm looking for opinions; and yes I know the quote. :wink:
That said, on our trip up to the San Juans [after the Bellingham GT] we decided to purchase our own dinghy. We have been borrowing a "donut" dinghy, but I dislike [chancing it] rowing due to weather/current.
We want to be able to get to shore when anchored, move boat to boat and around marinas WITHOUT paddling. Exploring on the dinghy would be limited but we may want to do it.
I'm looking at either a 7'6" or an 8'6" with an inflatable floor (lighter than wood). I will probably power it with a Suzuki 2.5 horse 4 stroke, again, light weight (28 lbs) and so far I love our 150. Primarily it will be Meredith and I, but our grandaughter will accompany us from time to time. I will store it on the roof and lower it by hand with the motor stored out back and also "hand loaded" onto the dinghy. I also don't want the hassle of a seperate gas tank.
I want to hear the pros and cons. I've read through all the posts here but with my limited experience, I need some input. I only want to buy a new motor once. (I'm cheap
).
Is bigger better? 2.5 horse enough to move the larger boat or would a heavier 4 horse be needed? If so, I may consider the 7'6" boat with the smaller motor. I've used a 7'11" inflatable with a 2 stroke 4 horse Johnson and it displaced enough water to move my brother and I at a decent clip, around 350 lbs +/-.
The boats I'm looking at have the following specs:
7'6" boat recommends a 3 horse max HP, 440 lb load capacity
8'6" boat jumps up to a 10 horse max HP, 770 lb load capacity
Both weigh nearly the same @ 68 & 69 lbs respectively. (Although I'm confirming that with the manufacturer as I'm skeptical 1' = only 1 lb.)
Both are made out of "1,100 Dtex plastomer PVC fabric with a polyester support...". I know some like Hypolon better, but that's realistically out of our price range now. I plan on covering it when it's not being used and storing it inside @ home.
That's about all I got. Mahalo for any and all input.
That said, on our trip up to the San Juans [after the Bellingham GT] we decided to purchase our own dinghy. We have been borrowing a "donut" dinghy, but I dislike [chancing it] rowing due to weather/current.
We want to be able to get to shore when anchored, move boat to boat and around marinas WITHOUT paddling. Exploring on the dinghy would be limited but we may want to do it.
I'm looking at either a 7'6" or an 8'6" with an inflatable floor (lighter than wood). I will probably power it with a Suzuki 2.5 horse 4 stroke, again, light weight (28 lbs) and so far I love our 150. Primarily it will be Meredith and I, but our grandaughter will accompany us from time to time. I will store it on the roof and lower it by hand with the motor stored out back and also "hand loaded" onto the dinghy. I also don't want the hassle of a seperate gas tank.
I want to hear the pros and cons. I've read through all the posts here but with my limited experience, I need some input. I only want to buy a new motor once. (I'm cheap

Is bigger better? 2.5 horse enough to move the larger boat or would a heavier 4 horse be needed? If so, I may consider the 7'6" boat with the smaller motor. I've used a 7'11" inflatable with a 2 stroke 4 horse Johnson and it displaced enough water to move my brother and I at a decent clip, around 350 lbs +/-.
The boats I'm looking at have the following specs:
7'6" boat recommends a 3 horse max HP, 440 lb load capacity
8'6" boat jumps up to a 10 horse max HP, 770 lb load capacity
Both weigh nearly the same @ 68 & 69 lbs respectively. (Although I'm confirming that with the manufacturer as I'm skeptical 1' = only 1 lb.)
Both are made out of "1,100 Dtex plastomer PVC fabric with a polyester support...". I know some like Hypolon better, but that's realistically out of our price range now. I plan on covering it when it's not being used and storing it inside @ home.
That's about all I got. Mahalo for any and all input.