Nice. In the summer, I purchased the 430. Love it. My first time setting up was done at home and took almost an hour. We now set it up in about the same time now. Perfect for crabbing and day trip camping trips. It gets up on plane really fast with our Tohatsu 20hp.
I leave mine inflated, as I installed a bilge pump under my deck, and also hate putting the floor in. I have a Zodiac 3.8 with Merc 25. Love these small boats, great for car camping. I have a trailer for mine.
Nice pump you used…..brand & model….purchased from….enjoyed your video…thanks….. I would also like to see how you got it in the water from there….thanks..
@AquaticMonkey would have to answer the pump question. We sell the Bravo pumps ourselves and they are a 2 stage pump that automatically turns off at the pressure you set. I believe Aquatic's pump is a single stage blower pump. But as I said, I don't have any more information than that.
Hey so the angel it hard to see but it's only around 4-5 feet from the water at the back of the boat. I try not to drag it to much but I'll just lift and pivot the front and then the back and just slide it on once it's on the side of the water. Compared to a fiberglass boat or metal these are extremely lightweight.
They work great as a stored tender! We have customers that have their regular tender on davits, but want another tender the kids can mess around with. So they get a second tender and store it in the storage locker.
I'm not if the pump that @aquaticmonkey is using is a 2 stage pump or not. Some pumps are only a single stage, but the one we sell is 2 stages. So with a 2 stage pump, indeed you need to let the pump kick over to that second stage and then shut off. Our pumps we sell have a dial that you select the PSI you want to inflate to, and the pump automatically shuts off when you get to that value.
@@ytboombox Well, I have a 9.9 Evinrude, and it is about 50/ 60 pounds, I can lift it in short burst. I am also a smaller guy. I'd imagine that is probably like 70/ 80? I'm sure you could look it up.
Yup, @AquaticMonkey has had a couple of years experience. We tell our customers that on your first time out, expect about an hour, but after a few times you should be around the 30 minute mark. After that, as you get better and learn your boat, you'll get to the 20 minute mark.
Ya I could have posted it at regular speed but do you really want to watch me watch a pump for 15 minutes? I 4X the full video with the timer on as you can see so it's still less than 15min
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