T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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228.1 | | PULSAR::BERENS | | Mon Feb 10 1986 13:37 | 14 |
| Well, maybe in the past you could argue that you didn't need to register
a dinghy used solely as a tender. These days, if it has a motor and it
isn't registered, you will eventually (as soon as some law officer type
catches you) have to pay the fine for an unregistered boat. I believe
that documentation covers just the boat documented. Other boats are
governed by state laws, all of which (so far as I know) require
registering any boat with a motor. I have used (very occasionally) an
outboard on my unregistered Avon for the last three years. This spring I
am registering it. The fee is a lot smaller than the fine and the worry
about getting caught isn't worth it to me any more.
Alan
|
228.2 | | TALLIS::RODENHISER | | Tue Feb 11 1986 10:26 | 11 |
| A while back I used to motor around Marion harbor in constant view of
the harbor patrol with my unregistered Avon and never had a problem.
Then I took a cruise to Maine and won a warning ticket within a half hour
of my arrival.
Anything with a motor has to be either registered by a state or CG documented.
Since a dinghy isn't big enough to be documented (carrying the name of a
documented vessel doesn't count) it has to be registered.
John
|
228.3 | | FREMEN::FRENCH | | Tue Feb 11 1986 12:31 | 18 |
| You mentioned that you would be in N.H. waters. Things may be changing
regarding what you have to do in N.H. In years past, C.G. numbers were
only good for offshore. Anyone inland had to have state reg. on any power
boat and any sailboat over 12'.
Back in the fall, I read that N.H. was going (or proposing to go)
to CG numbers for power boats, but... only for boats over a certain
horsepower. 10-15 h.p. as I recall. Has anyone heard the details on this
new law? In either case, one would need to register his low h.p. dinghy
motor.
I hope to get to the N.H. boat show. I think it is in a couple of weeks.
If I do, and if the N.H.Marine Patrol is there as usual, I will pump them
for all the legislative changes for N.H. boating this year and post them here.
Bill
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228.4 | | ASGMKA::HARDY | | Wed Feb 12 1986 08:30 | 9 |
| I agree with RE: 2. According to Chapman's (Ed. 55, pg. 35): "A dinghy used
with a vessel not having a number, such as a documented boat, must be registered
and have it's own number as for any other craft if it is propelled by a motor
of any horsepower." That's from the Federal Motor Boating Safety Act of 1971
(of some such thing). Which means that the state (any state) must comply
with the above requirement if operating in Federal waters.
Gary H...
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228.5 | Dinghy motor registration/sales tax? | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Wed May 09 1990 13:57 | 19 |
| I have a question regarding sales tax/registration of dinghy motors.
We recently purchased a 1.5 hp Johnson Colt to replace the Cruise and
Carry which never worked well but that is another story. At the time
of purchase, we were asked if we wanted to pay the sales tax then or
pay it where we registered the motor. We took the tax exemption form
given to us by the dealer, paid the bill (minus the RI state tax) and
went on our merry way. The questions are, does one register a motor
when registering a dinghy? Are these separate somehow? I asked a power
boater here and he indicated that there was no separate tax or
registration information for his outboard (big one - 150 hp.). My
partner also indicated that he has never registered a dinghy motor
either. What is to prevent us from throwing the motor on the transom
and putting away without ever paying a state sales tax? We will need
to register the dinghy from the indications of earlier replies. Is
there a hook in the process that catches this? The option of not
paying the tax at the time of purchase was a surprise to me.
Brian
|
228.6 | This was true for Mass. in 1988 | NETMAN::CARTER | | Wed May 09 1990 15:21 | 9 |
| A couple of years ago I registered my dinghy for the first time. On
the application form there is a space asking for motor information. I
told the clerk at the tax office that the motor that was on the boat
then was probably not the motor I would be using. He said, "Don't
worry. Don't even write anything in that space. We don't care what
the motor is." My dinghy is registered. My motor is not.
djc
|
228.7 | Different by State | NWD002::SASLOW_ST | STEVE | Wed May 09 1990 16:45 | 7 |
| It depends on your state. In Washington, you must register any motor
driven boat no matter how small. The form includes the motor
information and you will need proof of sales tax. The only exception
is for tenders of documented vessels which are not registered
separately. However they must be used exclusively for ship to shore
trips, no joy riding around the harbor or theoretically you can
get a violation ticket.
|
228.8 | | MFGMEM::KEENAN | PAUL KEENAN DTN 297-7332 | Wed May 09 1990 17:41 | 10 |
| In RI, you have to register the outboard seperately. It's a one
time deal. There's no sticker for the motor so no one will ever
know if you don't pay - until the CG boards you.
If the powered dinghy is used as a tender, registration is simple.
You use the same registration number as your boat and add a special
suffix. The DEM in Prov. can tell you what the lettering is.
If you want to be completely legal, you also need PFD's in the dinghy
and a running light.
|
228.9 | Suffix for dinghy of documented boat | AITG::COUTURE | Abandon shore | Thu May 10 1990 13:59 | 3 |
| The suffix for the dinghy of a documented boat in RI is "TT" so you
just add the double t's to your documentation number and you're done -
no muss, no fuss, no tax.
|
228.10 | Another tidbit from the nautical trivia file | AIADM::SPENCER | Commuter from the other Cape | Thu May 10 1990 14:49 | 7 |
| >>> The suffix for the dinghy of a documented boat in RI is "TT"...
This is true in many other instances as well. "TT" stands for "Tender
to...", borrowed from the oft-seen "T/T Yachtname" on dinghy transoms in
English-speaking harbors worldwide where they remember such traditions.
J.
|
228.11 | Any need to "report" the TT number to someone? | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Thu May 10 1990 18:25 | 6 |
| If I understand this correctly, since our boat is documented via the
federales all we need to do is add the TT 1234567 to the dinghy and we
are done? Do we need to "tell" someone we have in fact accomplished
this? FWIW - I believe the boat is documented as being from Boston.
Brian
|
228.12 | | MSCSSE::BERENS | Alan Berens | Thu May 10 1990 18:32 | 3 |
| re the TT stuff:
This isn't legal in all states.
|
228.13 | | MFGMEM::KEENAN | PAUL KEENAN DTN 297-7332 | Fri May 11 1990 10:10 | 8 |
| It's my understandind that in RI, the "TT" is added to the RI
Registration Number. You simply put the same number on your dink
as on the bow of your boat - plus the "TT". No paperwork, no fee,
you're done.
You said you're documented in Boston. Does this mean you're not
registered in RI? If so, this makes things more difficult.
|
228.14 | Good info thanks. | RECYCL::MCBRIDE | | Fri May 11 1990 10:26 | 12 |
| Our hailing port is Boston and not Jamestown so we are probably in
violation of a bazillion different things including other minor
environmental infractions (no holding tank - yet). I spoke with my
pahdnah last night and he said "gee, that's interesting" so I guess he
is not too worried. Having boated on the Bay for the last 30 years, he
has never had any problems with the Coasties or other authority except
for being told to get the heck out of the way ;-). I just don't like
being a criminal in waiting and would rather cover myself. His boat,
his dink, his motor + my advice = His decision. Works for me. Thanks
for all the info on this.
Brian
|
228.15 | You need a sticker | NSSG::BUDZINSKI | John Budzinski DTN 226-5912 | Wed May 16 1990 18:12 | 7 |
| I am also documented with the Coast Guard in Boston. You have to
register your dinghy (if it is motor powered) with a Rhode Island
registration. They'll get you if you don't. You may be able to get
away without the motor registration but they will ask you about it when
you register the dinghy. I don't think that the TT stuff really makes
any difference. If you're driving around on the water you need the
right color sticker.
|
228.16 | electric power | JUPITR::CHERNICK | | Mon Jun 11 1990 13:44 | 2 |
| Someone told me that if the motor is electric powered, registration
was not necessary. Is that true? This is for Mass.
|
228.17 | Not true! | MSESU::ADAMS | | Tue Jun 12 1990 16:56 | 13 |
|
re. -1.
I checked with two different registry offices regarding use of electric
motors on small boats. Both answers were the same: It must be
registered if it has a motor of any type.
There is also a common belief that only boats with motors of more than 5hp
had to be registered. Could have been true at one time, but not now.
Bob
|
228.18 | Inflatable questions | AKOCOA::GYOUNG | I ain't no glamour boy | Tue May 28 1991 14:04 | 16 |
| I'm in the final stages of procuring an inflatable with a small
outboard. I've got a few questions, some on facts and some on
experiences, which I'd be most appreciative for any help on.
o do I have to register the inflatable ? I'm sailing out of
Rhode Island.
o what about insurance ? Can/should I add it to my homeowners or
insure it separately ?
o what are the best ways to "secure" it on the dinghy dock racks ?
Thanks
Greg
|
228.19 | dingy registration in RI | SALEM::HASSON | | Tue May 28 1991 20:08 | 19 |
| Greg...
Rhode Island, as of last year, requires dingy registration, EVEN IF the
dingy is used as a tender to a dicumented yacht. Registration fee is
relatively low - I think mine was $25 or so.
If you have an insurance policy on the 'mother ship', the dingy may be
covered under that policy. Metropolitan policies are written that way.
As far as securing it, I guess the answer is another question; "against
what?" If it's left outside, and someone really wants it, it's gone no
matter what. However, most inflatables have a steel towing ring in the
bow; I'd run a chain thru that and something on the dock, like a rail,
cleat, etc., whatever you can get away with.
Where in RI?
john
|
228.20 | | AKOCOA::GYOUNG | I ain't no glamour boy | Wed May 29 1991 00:05 | 9 |
| Thanks John ..... we're sailing out of Norton's in East Greenwich; the
dinghy is mine, but the Catalina is owned by someone else, we have a
shared-expense arrangement and I'm contributing the dinghy towards our
mutual enjoyment this season. So I've got to handle the insurance
separately ...... guess I'll try Metpay first.
Greg
|
228.21 | Check with your homeowners insurance | MSCSSE::FRENCH | Bill French ZKO3-3/X8 381-1859 | Wed May 29 1991 10:03 | 7 |
| You might want to check with your homwowner's insurance. Mine (State
Farm) covers boats up to $500. As one who currently owns 7 boats, but
only one worth over $750, I only carry separate insurance on my Com-Pac
Yacht.
Bill
|
228.22 | Call 'em and ask | MAST::SCHUMANN | | Wed May 29 1991 10:08 | 11 |
| > Thanks John ..... we're sailing out of Norton's in East Greenwich; the
> dinghy is mine, but the Catalina is owned by someone else, we have a
> shared-expense arrangement and I'm contributing the dinghy towards our
> mutual enjoyment this season. So I've got to handle the insurance
> separately ...... guess I'll try Metpay first.
The insurance company that insures the boat may be willing to insure the dinghy
anyway. They might be able to do something as simple as adding your name to the
policy, at no charge.
--RS
|
228.23 | Lifeline cable instead of chain? | MILKWY::WAGNER | | Wed May 29 1991 13:43 | 15 |
|
Maybe get a quote from your partner's company. You can always
reimburse him, and maybe save a few bucks. A separate policy sounds
more expensive. `Course, then it's in YOUR name....
For locking, I use a piece of lifeline, nicoressed into loops at
the ends. Lighter, won't stain, and can be fed thru docks, cleats,
D-rings on the inflatable, and the motor. Also harder to cut than small
chain, I hope. But then, like those brass locks, the best you can hope
for is to keep honest folks honest, and discouraging young joyriders.
If there's any fear, you may want to lock the outboard in your trunk-
I bet they're the hot items.
Scott.
|
228.24 | best type of letters for inflatables | AKO539::KALINOWSKI | | Thu Aug 19 1993 13:29 | 13 |
| I just registared my inflatable this morning , and need to put the
lettering on the boat. I don't like those plastic boards people
rope on the sides.
This leaves me with glue on rubber letters or one of those stencil
kits, either of which cost more than the registration itself.
Which one works best- Letters or stencils?
Anyone have a stencel kit they want to rent out?
john
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228.25 | Try vinyl lettering kit | DPDMAI::CLEVELAND | Grounded on The Rock | Fri Aug 20 1993 20:57 | 13 |
| John,
I went to an office depot and bought a set of vinyl letters/numbers for
about $3.00. I then cleaned the rubber rub rail on my Avon where I
wanted my numbers to be and then applied them. I only had to replace
one of them when I smacked into something that tore it off the boat.
Replacement was done the same way.
You might want to try this. The only thing you have to lose is a few
bucks and some time. I'm on my 3rd year with this arrangement now.
Good luck,
Robert
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