I know the stability topic has been beat to death but we were talking about this on the water yesterday. I've had my PA14 now for 5 years. I've never flipped it or even come close. The only time I even got slightly nervous was when crossing a channel with a strong outgoing tide and 40mph winds that were blowing against the tide. I was fishing the Jax Kayak Classic in Northern Florida on that day and the was transiting the only section of big water that I had to cross to get back to the ramp. The waves were stacked up pretty big and I got turned broadside in the wind and waves. When I crested the top of a wave I felt the wind get underneath the hull and it lifted slightly. I was able to counter the lean and made it across safely without further incident. Other than that I've had no issues with boat wakes even from 50' offshore boats in the California Delta running by my at full steam. I also fish the Pacific Ocean here and have done so in an eight foot swell with no stability problems.
I haven't spent any time in a PA12 but it seems like the majority of the stories I here about the flipping of Pro Anglers center around users that went with the 12 instead of the 14. Does this sound right? Is there that much difference in stability between the two hulls just due to the 2 feet of length difference?
I would think that having the shorter bow section would place the anglers weight that much further on the nose of the boat. The center sponson of the hull being narrow at the bow and not having the support of the outside sponsons would then decrease the stability. Does that make sense?
I'm a big guy personally at 6'4" and 250lbs so I like the idea of the 14'. I'm about to buy a new 2015 PA14 in fact and will be giving my 2010 model to my 12 year old to use so that I don't have to pedal him around on the back of mine anymore!
