chrisj wrote:
So guys, if you want a boat that's fast, needs trailering, carries two or more people, can sail without a Mirage drive AND has a jib, why not a Hobie 16?
I am fortunate to have both: an 08 red AI, and a brand-spanking-new yellow 2010 TI – I am very happy with them both, each is sailed for a different sailing experience.
As another fine poster pointed out, speed is not all that important unless you want to follow another higher performance sail boat.
I greatly admire the Hobie Cat 16 (and other Cats) -- I am a member of a local Hobie & Prindle Catamaran Club where I keep my Adventure Tandem Island. (There even is a Hobie Trifioler there a on the beach, a few yards away from my TI).
But for me, the greater complexity of the rigging, the weight of the craft, the need for large beach wheels, the required help of another crew member (I am a healthy 62 year old), trailering and storage, would greatly hinder my use of such fine Hobie sea crafts.
A few older members of the club have taken an interest in the TI -- my guess, for the same aforementioned reasons, their time also will come.
If I were in my 20’s (and had the money) I would like to think I would be sailing one of the high performance Hobie Cats. (When I was in my 20’s I played Steve McQueen on my Yamaha motorcycle.)
What I like about the Hobie AI is the elegant simplicity and the thrill of solo sailing that it provides.
I can still handle the TI by myself, but with an enthusiastic sailing partner on board, it even is an easier and more enjoyable day of sailing than with my trusty AI. (And before not very long, the Hobie TI’s will be sailing with an optional jib.)
Bottom line:
With either the AI or TI (with their Mirage drives) I can take a chance to go out into the bay looking for wind , whereas the adventuresome Hobie Cat sailors are still waiting for the right kind of wind to pick up.
Thanks for your question.