10' max oal sneakboat design suggestions

Chris Hanson

New member
I'm a commercial fisherman in Sitka AK, and am looking at replacing my old RIB with a duckboat. I do a lot of boat-based deer, moose, and some bird hunting in the fall and winter, and like to let my crew take the skiff out for adventures occasionally in-season for a shore break. My RIB is getting unreliable in the air-holding department, and frankly I never liked it. It has an F15 Yamaha tiller on it I'd like to use on the new boat, however.

Since I launch and retrieve with my winch and boom, and too-often find myself dragging it back down the beach on low tides, I'd like to keep the wet weight as low a possible. My current setup is 360# full of fuel. Also, the stowage space on top of my rear aluminum deck house is limited to about 12' total length with the motor tilted up. Any longer and I risk snagging the bow or lower unit on pilings when tying up.

These boats have a hard life, it's a very rocky coast here.

I'm familiar with Devin's Broadbill, and would consider building it with uhmw bottom and keel guards, and asking Sam if I could lop a foot off the bow with minimal negative effects... but would rather just buy a manufactured boat that fits the bill.

Any suggestions?
 
Unlike Anthony, I can't think of too many options. I own a Broadbill and can't imagine losing a foot. County Line may have something that works but they have a long waiting list. You'd be lucky to have it by next season.

 
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Chris

Thank you.

How important is it you have an outboard on the boat? Would armstrong work? If so a hellbender makes a really nice boat that works with your weight and length requirements.


I got curious and went looking online for something that would meet your needs. This one seems to hit the mark. Rocks are no problem and it can handle that 15hp you mentioned.


Here's another. Not sure it meets all your requirements but I'll throw it out there anyway.

 
I'm a big guy at 6' 2"/270 with size 16 feet that don't fit well in small boats. Take this with that context and all the grains of salt appropriate, but 10' is awfully small. I know space and weight are priorities, but if you can get to 12', I think you'll have a more comfortable and sea-worthy boat. Given that it will be banged around on rocks and maybe when loading/unloading, I'd be thinking aluminum.
 
If you are going with 10' the Mini Mee and the Silver Streak look interesting. Note the weight capacity for the Mini Mee 10--318 pounds. It's a one man boat, and a big guy better not have much gear or shoot anything bigger than a couple of geese. I didn't see a weight capacity for the 12, but would expect a decent increase.
 
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