Bill Waller and I went to the Ft Desoto park in St Petersburg, FL, on Mar 5, where the WaterTribe Everglades Challenge and Ultimate Florida Challenge would begin the next morning.
Jim Czarnowski (engineer in charge of Hobie AI Tandem) was busy assembling an AI Tandem. He cheerfully put up with us over the next couple hours as we took pictures of his boat and asked questions. We came away with these points (any errors are mine—Chekika)
• The AI Tandem has minimal propensity to dive. (They are working on a bow wave deflector for the AI Single.)
• Amas are 4' plus longer (13' 4” vs 9' on the AI single) and extend forward to within 1' of the bow (see picture below.)
• Beam is 30" wide (vs 27.5 on AI single) with much more volume in the bow to help prevent diving
• Sail is 18' tall
• Hull is ca. 18’ long
• Hull weighs 115 lbs; rigged weight 190 lbs (according to Hobie product site)
• 2 Sturdy carry handles on each side of hull (see picture below)
• Aka/xbar connection redesigned—sturdier & easier to connect (see pictures below)
• Dagger board retracts into hull using a lever which is integral to the hull
• Cockpits are 1" longer
• Rear, top cargo area is much smaller (just big enough to hold the Hobie Bait Well).
• Rear TnS hatch has slanted surface reducing water entry while sailing.
• Hiking pole for steering is a prototype (see picture below.)
• AI Tandem is designed for addition of a jib (see picture below)
• The jib is a prototype (but near production according to Matt Miller).
Quote:
Quote from Bill Waller:
Things I liked:
A lot of boat...and upgrades...for the money.
Some people will ride as a passenger that aren't comfortable going alone (my wife).
Hull/amas store in garage (Anyone want to buy a good used AI).
Extra Mirage Drive available when going single on expeditions.
Jib to help with low summer winds here on the South Florida Gulf Coast.
Things I would have liked:
Cockpits: Square-off into one long rectangular space with click-in, fold-down, easily removable seats to make space to hold a cooler and multi-day expedition gear, OR at night (with gear on trampoline) can support a cot/tent (fore-aft) across xbar/tramp area.
Pictures: Amas are 3’ 4” longer and positioned much more forward than those on AI Single
Carry handle; note knob on rudder control
Aka – Xbar connection: Strong and easy to connect

Prototype hiking out steering pole
Note furled jib on Jim and Elena’s boat
In summary, I am of the same opinion as Bill Waller—the AI Tandem is a powerful upgrade of the AI Single. It seems to be a great boat, building on Hobie’s experience with the Single. And, perhaps best of all, it seems to be a great price.
That said, I don’t think I will be buying an AI Tandem soon. I have 2 AI Singles, and my wife loves to run her own boat whether it is a kayak or an AI—“lots of personal satisfaction.”I also came away with an appreciation of the tramps which I had not had before. The tramps can carry a lot of gear for an extended expedition trip. Jim Hall is doing the UFC using an AI Tandem equipped with tramps. He is carrying sufficient food to last 30 days—the maximum length of the UFC. When I asked him what he was going to use the tramps for (before he had loaded much of his gear on the tramps), he said “I may sleep on them.”
That sounded like a great idea. During his UFC journey circumnavigating Florida, there will be many times when there is no place to set up a tent—the tramps could come in very handy.
Jim Hall has already rescued 2 people from a capsized sailboat during his UFC. Piloting his AI Tandem, he actually picked them out of the water and carried them on his tramps to safety on shore. He did all this in very rough seas with an expedition-loaded AI Tandem.
Keith