Chekika wrote:
Trident, I'm trying to figure exactly what you are saying and its significance. (1) The cockpits don't hold water and cannot weigh the boat down except when a wave momentarily fills them--they drain within a couple minutes. (2) In my experience, the hatches are never submerged unless the boat is full of water. Are you saying the hatches will be submerged if the 600# limit is exceeded? (3) I don't believe that "Hobie" has ever made clear whether the 600# limit is for the hull only or for the fully assemble boat (hull with amas). It would seem that the 600# limit applies to the hull only since the hull may be used independently of the fully assembled boat. It would be nice if Hobie would weigh in on this with a clear statement of what the "600#" limit refers. It is important because people get stopped on the water by law enforcement who apply the 600# limit to the assembled boat.
Keith
I think the 600 lbs limit, or close to it, is correct for a fully assembled TI, ie. with Amas and significant weight on the tramps.
I have carried 4 people on my TI in calm water, 2 in the kayak and 2 on the tramps, 700+ lbs. There are three hatches on the TI - front seat, back seat, stern. With this much weight, The boat is sluggish and rides low. On my TI, the second hatch was completely submerged the whole time, but, the first and stern hatch were not, but, the water was close to submerging the first hatch also.. The hatch gets submerged because the boat rides so low in the water.. When I got off the water, the TI had the most water in it that it ever had... I tend to agree that the hatches leak a little when they are completely submerged. I did not like the way the boat behaved with that much weight, so, I have never tried it again.. It is also no fun, when you are looking at a submerged hatch between your legs.