dagger rival vs. outrage
Moderators: kenneth, sbroam, TheKrikkitWars, Mike W., Sir Adam, KNeal, PAC, adamin
dagger rival vs. outrage
how do these boats compare to each other and any other known reference points?
Rival has more hull speed and is somewhat of an intermediate paddlers design. I paddled a Rival for years. Great boat to grow into. Dagger had the best edges out there, cant go wrong. Outrage is more maneuverable and probably drier, but that all depends on the paddler. I spent about 5 minutes in an outrage, but they have a huge fan club.
"Don't Panic"
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are you associated with Millbrook?
Are the composites as tough as Royalex to begin with or would you recommend avoiding them if you have a tendency to bounce off of rocks?
I noticed the list price for Rival on the Millbrook website is 1275 and you are asking close to that for the Rival you have listed. Is it pretty much a new boat?
the 26 pound weight is certainly attractive. does this effect handling of the boat on pushy water?
Hope these are not inappropriate questions for the forum. If so please forgive my indiscretion and feel free to PM if you are so inclined.
Are the composites as tough as Royalex to begin with or would you recommend avoiding them if you have a tendency to bounce off of rocks?
I noticed the list price for Rival on the Millbrook website is 1275 and you are asking close to that for the Rival you have listed. Is it pretty much a new boat?
the 26 pound weight is certainly attractive. does this effect handling of the boat on pushy water?
Hope these are not inappropriate questions for the forum. If so please forgive my indiscretion and feel free to PM if you are so inclined.
- sdbrassfield
- Supporting Paddler
- Posts: 214
- Joined: Thu Jul 14, 2005 11:51 am
- Location: Flatwater, North Carolina
I bought an 08 outrage and there are in my opinion some Quality Control Issues. Wood gunnels were waaaayyy out of shape. They sent me another boat no questions but the new boat still wasnt as tight as the older outrage I had. mad river factory outfitting stinks as well, I gutted it and started from scratch. again just my opinion. I love the way it paddles although next new boat wont be one.
Millbrook composite boats are very tough. That said, if you canoe like your in a pinball game(bouncing off every rock in sight) you'd be better off in ABS. The lightness of composite boats makes them very nimble and easier to avoid rocks than in a heavier boat. I have two primary boats, one for steep and shallow rivers( ABS) one for deeper and bigger rivers (composite). Repairs are not hard to do on a glass boat as well.