Stavanger, sun. 20110130
Mission Impossible
I and a friend started playing with boats - or "crafts" as we called them, when we were 10-11 years old. The type most in fashion with us was some sorts of flat, cross-planked "canoes". We quickly learned that 3 factors played a big role in increasing or robbing stability:
1) Just a few inches to or from on the beam played a big role.
2) The height of the thwart was also important, the lower we sat, the better, but since these crafts always leaked, we needed at least a bit clearance between the boat’s and our own bottoms.
3) These flat-bottomed boats went from a very stable to a very unstable mode as soon as a couple of buckets of water inside started sloshing about.
When we at 13 were granted permission to use my father’s 14’ færing, our chances of survival went up a lot (our parents didn’t know about our "crafts"). If the færing got a bit water inside, it all collected along the keel so the boat did not lose stability that easily.
After this long intro, I think that if you are hunting for a small dinghy that both rows well and that is also a rock steady load carrier, then you are on a Mission Impossible.
Good row-boats all have narrow waterlines and some skills are needed to use them. If you want to carry "four men and a big, frightened dog" as Bolger’s 8’ Brick , then you can’t expect that it will row that well, only just so, because of its big wetted area. By the way, from my childhood experience; I recommend fitting such box boats with side benches with longitudinal bulkheads. That way, if you ship a few buckets of water, it will soon be trapped in the footwell in the middle and not destabilise the boat. A couple of tragic capsizes with car ferries maybe would have been avoided if the designers had played with leaky, flat-bottomed boats as kids.
Arne
PS: Maybe a deep, narrow-beam dinghy with an easily fitted outrigger could be a compromise?