Tuesday, 15 July 2014

Tiderace Pace 17 Tour review

Four out of Five Stars

I bought my Pace 17 off Dan 7 months ago, I use it mostly for day trips but have done a 5 day tour with a longest distance of 43km in a day sitting in it for 6 hours, I am 187cm tall weigh 78kg and wear size 12 shoes, the pedals are on the second to last setting and there is lots of foot room. I have paddled it in up to 20knts loaded and unloaded.

The build quality is hard to fault with water tight hatches, foot pedals set at a good height, strong back band and deck fittings glassed over with no other rough edges inside to catch gear. There is an oval front hatch to make gear storage easy and plenty of volume forward and aft. Deck bungees hold a split paddle well with some room for a pump. The seat is acceptable for comfort, I had to install some hip padding to help with rolling as the seat was a bit wide for me but otherwise no modifications, the cockpit size allows a backside in first entry.

On my boat the rudder blade would stick between the sides of the rudder housing needing me to sand the side of the blade to let it deploy by its self.

In my perfect world I would do away with the day hatch, they add cost and weight, move the bulkhead behind the seat forward to the cockpit rim to help with draining the cockpit and cross the rudder cables to help with turning.

As for paddling I find the stability fine, slightly light on the primary on flat water but once in waves don't notice it, feels like a boat that will look after you when you are tired. Forward paddling is easy, the boat moves well and has a narrow catch due to its swede form, the foot pedals allow pressure to be applied without steering and the volume forward gives a dry ride.
 For turning, think touring turning, on the move use the rudder, I have not had a lot of luck with hip steering in spite of also owning a skeg boat, to pivot raise the rudder, sweep and edge. This is not a criticism rather a feature of this class of kayak.
The Pace lee cocks when stationary but paddling with the wind abeam it doesn't require much correction from the rudder and so far haven't had any problems turning up wind but will cross the rudder cables at some stage.
It surfs well with rudder down running straight to the beach or downwind without broaching and is as easy as a 25kg boat is to catch waves.
As mentioned previously I fitted hip padding to help with rolling, don't think Greenland rolling weapon here but acceptable for this class of boat with good thigh braces to help lock you in and transfer the action to the boat.


I would say the kayak does what it is advertised as doing, if you want something else there are other boats in their range with different features. This is a kayak for someone who wants an easy to use quality tourer with a large volume, all day comfort, that will look after you when it gets rough and you are tired.

Reviewed by Martin Fraser

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