WATCH: Tender Storage with Captain Chris

Tender Storage

There’s no denying that tenders and RIBS are an absolute necessity when cruising. But what do you do when it comes to tender storage?

Tenders take you from ship to shore and everywhere in between. We’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: RIBS are a do-it-all wonder. However, you may also wonder the best way to stow that tender.

RIBs often must be stored on a trailer or set of hanging davits. You can tow the tender while underway. Or, you can attempt to pull off the maneuver our friend Captain Chris saw recently and so gallantly recorded.

Tow It

Towing is a cost-efficient and simple way to keep your tender close at hand.

  • Use a bridle and install heavy-duty, stainless-steel D-rings on either side of the dinghy’s bow.
  • Use at least a three-eighths-inch line and tie w bowline at the end of the tow line and the other ends through the loop. Attach the tag ends of the Y to each D-ring so that the pulling load is evenly distributed.
  • Create a Y at the other end of the tow line and attach it to the stern of your boat. Add a float over the line to help keep the line clear from the props.

Keep your entries and departures in mind. Before pulling into the dock or marina, pull the tow line in and lash the bow right to the transom to keep the tender’s movements in sync with the main vessel.

Strap It

Store the tender directly on the swim platform. You can do this with transom clips or stern davits.  However, you will lose the use of the swim platform until the tender is removed. Additionally, you’ll have to remove the outboard and store it on deck.  NEVER store a tender’s outboard below deck.

Launch it

If your boat’s big enough, you can mount the dinghy on the bow with the engine attached. This requires adding chocks and either a davit or electric crane to remove the tender. It could also restrict your line of sight from the helm, require electrical installation and be more difficult to deploy into the water and board.

Do What This Guy Does

How do you handle tender storage?

Let us know in the comments below!

 

Walker Bay Generation 525

Love Me Tender

The Walker Bay Generation 525 pushes boundaries.

The words “yachtsman” and “passion” are so often used together that I worry the emphasis is lost, like describing every boat as unique. That was until I spent time with the Walker Bay team that just delivered a 17-foot RIB they branded Generation 525 that’s intended to serve the 115- 135-foot yacht market rather competitively.

Passion, as it turns out, is precisely what drove naval engineers and product specialists to tweak and rethink nearly every aspect of a niche market, creating a RIB that pushes the boundaries of innovation and blends durability and practicality to what becomes an extension of the very yacht a tender serves.

Work began three years ago on a new stringer process to vastly improve and achieve a smooth ride. Some RIB manufacturers use a basic plywood stringer to support the hull and top deck. Repeat after me: Plywood and water are not a good mix over time. Think lumpy oatmeal and you get the picture. The Gen 525 incorporates a polyurethane composite micro stringer system in the floor that’s lighter and stronger than wood. Mating the hull and deck together required countless hours of testing various bonding materials. Instead of the typical air cavity between the hull and deck, Walker Bay created a unidirectional glass and a polyurethane stringer grid bonding system to absorb the impact from wave chop. This also serves to make the hull stronger and provides permanent positive buoyancy.

The real trick—and where the word passion comes to play—involves the number of hulls they created to get the ride perfected. Just as your tire alignment can smooth out your car ride, Walker Bay noticed that distortion and misalignment in competitors’ hulls led to poor handling and stress cracks. Engineers built a sophisticated jig and alignment process for joining the main parts, so stress energy is distributed efficiently for a better handling and predictably longer-lasting boat.

Skip Reisert of Tender Care Boats in Ft. Lauderdale, who sells Walker Bay and AB’s Nautilus and Oceanus series of tenders, joined the team as a consultant for the topside work. “So often I get an owner who has commissioned a yacht and wants to outfit it with a tender without really knowing what size will fit or some of the nuances of davit placement, lifting capacity, right down to davit lifting points,” Reisert shared. “For example, a Westport 112 can only support a tender up to 15 feet. Maximum length on the Westport 130 is 18 feet, so this is a very narrow, yet vital measurement consideration when shopping for the right tender.”

Walker Bay took note of the needs of this niche market and strategically located seven extra stainless-steel davit-lifting points and flush-mounted them, greatly reducing the potential of snagging clothing or skin of passengers. The team realized that especially in the charter market, guests are unaccustomed to maintaining a low center of gravity for boarding a tender, so they incorporated port and starboard recessed teak boarding steps and an ingenious removable leaning boarding post handle, all of which leads to a generous-sized clear pathway to seating.

When used for exploring, snorkeling or watersports, the Gen 525 is ready for fun. Retractable ski pole, deluxe boarding ladder and bow area sunpad are all options, along with the standard insulated cooler locker for refreshments and freshwater shower with 10-gallon capacity.

Our test boat in Naples, Florida, was equipped with a very quiet Honda 115 outboard. Once we left the no-wake zone, the tender popped up on plane effortlessly and held a true course with nary a touch on the hydraulic tilt steering and without any loss of the horizon even though I had engaged the driver’s side flip-up bolster seat. We topped out at 44 mph with two people on board and a full tank (32 gallons) of fuel. While Honda is the preferred engine partner, Reisert, who is an Evinrude dealer, says the E-TEC 115 two-stroke engine will easily add another 3-4 mph—more than enough speed to make your eyes water and get back home or to the yacht quickly.

With passenger backrest cushions, five stainless steel cup holders, the aforementioned cooler, and four pop-up cleats, those with access to the ICW may consider this a “second” boat for your dock and those impromptu waterfront dining dashes with friends—and bring a bunch of them. It’s rated for 10 passengers.

“Walker Bay has raised the bar in every way with this Generation 525,” says Reisert. “They added deadrise in the hull, smoothed out the ride, are easily two to three miles per hour faster than the competition, and created an open layout and vinyl seating appearance that will complement your yacht.”

By Alan Wendt, Southern Boating Magazine November 2016

Specifications:
LOA: 17′ 2″
Beam: 8′ 4″
Weight: 1,160 lbs.
Fuel: 32 gals.
Max horsepower: 115 hp
MSRP: $49,995
walkerbay.com

Sealegs

By Land or Sea

Sealegs® Amphibious Marine Craft is a revolutionary patented concept that swiftly transforms an all-terrain vehicle into a fully equipped powerboat at the push of a button. Sealegs® aims to reduce the hassle of boat launch and retrieval through fully retractable wheels that allow you to conveniently drive your boat back to storage at the end of a day on the water. Sealegs® Amphibious Marine Craft can reach up to 48 mph in water and 10 mph on land. With five initial sizes and styles, Sealegs® offers a performance vehicle that allows for on and off shore adventures. MSRP starts at $85,000; sealegs.com 

Southern Boating January 2014

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