Jon,
We also bought the Avon 3.11 last summer, from Defender. It replaces a not sold yet..but definitely for sale nesting D4 Dighy in great shape <$350>.
We had not used an inflatable for a few years, so we were surprised by a few things with the Avon. It rows awfully..with two of us in there, and the boat inflated to the point where the foot inflator will not add any more to it, the boat is just too poor at rowing to be of much use that way. Our D4 dinghy would have some carry after your stroke. The inflatable has zero carry. It basicly stops dead at the end of the stroke. So if you will be rowing..forget an inflatable. However, that said, we love teh dinghy itself. It motors quite well with our little 2 hp. Evinrude, and frankly..I would bet that it would plane off with a 4 hp.
Stowage: We decided before buying the Avon that the CD30 was too small a boat to store the dinghy on the stern, and towing was not an option except for in the islands. Davits or any additional weight on the stern was just not going to happen with our boat. I had already added 270 lbs. of sand to the bow to get her into alignment with the lines as she was designed..this is to neutralize a basicly empty boat.
So we settled on the area in front of the dodger. I have built a rough version (1st. draft) of a box that mounts to the boats sea hood and grab rails, and that holds the folded Avon dinghy. It is setup so that the box front and sides fold down using s.s. piano hinges, and the dinghy is slid out about 1 ft., then unfolded, and pumped up. Next, we attach a lite 3-part bridle that I tied from a length of spare line. The bridle consists of two large diameter loops that go over the end caps of the dinghy's tubes, and the third element is a snap shackle that attaches to the bow towing eye. These three elements all meet in the center of the dingy, and there is a lifting eye tied in here. The main halyard is then used to lift the dinghy into the water and also to retrieve her. We can now acomplish a complete inflation manually, with launch in 10 minutes (which is the maximum time I estimated that I would accept for a rescue platform to be ready for use, should it be needed). The D4 nesting dingy took far longer than this to reassemble, and had to be done in the water to boot. Lets see that occur at night, in 15ft.seas. It sure was a blast to row though...hmm
Larry DeMers
s/ DeLaMer
Cape Dory 30
Jon wrote: Hi All,
I'm thinking of picking up an Avon Roll Away Inflatable. Does anyone have experience with these or similar inflatables? I've alway used a glass tender, but I don't like to tow it and don't want it on deck. Do the inflatables deflate small enough to store in a locker? Do they take long to inflate with a foot pump? Do they row as well as a hard tender? Are they tough to handle on windy days? What size is recommended?
Thanx,
Jon
demers@sgi.com