Ingenious inflatable retrieval method!

Valkyrie

New member
Hi Brats,

Over the years we have had seemingly interminable discussions here on what inflatable to buy and how to best get it onto the roof without falling overboard or necessitating another hernia operation! I think we now have the answer thanks to my good buddy David on Alma's Only out of the Richmond area.

For the last four years or so David has joined me at our cabin here in Ohio for a week of deer hunting, good food, talk of C-Dory's and solving of the world's problems, at least according to our points of view. One night our discussion was on C-Dory's and David revealed what I consider the absolute best solution to getting an inflatable onto the roof easily and safely. He hasn't been on the site for a while so I will share his clever idea, but claim no credit for it whatsoever.

He removes the anchor rode from the gypsy of his windlass and takes a wrap around it with his RU260's painter. He also added a remote control feature to his windlass, long enough to reach the cockpit. With the dinghy positioned at the stern of the boat and the painter extending over the roof, he begins retrieving it with the remote, lifting the inflatable over the engine. I am not sure if it then rests on the Bimini structure or not. He then uses the windlass to pull the inflatable onto the roof!

I don't know what windlass he uses, but from a picture of his boat in our NC CBGT sub-album I know that the axis of the winch is mounted vertically, not horizontally like on Valkyrie. Don't know if this makes a difference or not.

Anyhow, this is one of those ingenious remedies that our group comes up with time after time that just begs to be copied!

One final note because the retired English teacher in me has to point out on anchor retrieval devices - it's a windlass, not windless and a winch, not wench, which is something completely different, but has had meaningful applications at certain points in my life! Yes, that was WAY before Marcia and I got married!

Hope this gives the handymen here something to do while waiting for better boating weather.

Regards,

Nick
"Valkyrie"
 
Nick, that sound like a smart way to use the whatever that is (windlass?) to provide muscle. The only question I have is what he does with the anchor chain? Wrap it? Remove it?

Boris

PS I'm and ingineer, so correct English is somewhat foreign. Except for spellcheck
 
Hi Nick, greetings from the "other" end of Erie.

That sounds like a great, practical idea but I couldn't help thinking of my crazy Italian friend who tried to invent some system of ropes and pulleys connected to a hand winch at the helm for tilting his outboard! :?

Regards, Rob
 
English teacher or not, a wench is what we here in Utah call that thing with gears that helps you to lift things up and down. The yellow kernel that you eat off the cob is called carn and you keep your horse in the born and sew up yer drawers using a pen and niddle. You write with a pin. You eat your steak with a fark and a lot of the folks who are moving in speak spinach. You drink yer melk when yuh eat your mell. You buy stuff cheap when it is on sell. And when those little frozen bits of ice drop out of the sky you say, "look Margie its beginning to hell." And so on!
 
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