Product Details
- Binding: Sports
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- Brand: Sevylor
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- Color: N/A
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- EAN: 0089736201707
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- Features: All-around inflatable recreational boat for family fun; fits three persons, Package includes small foot pump and pair of oars, DIN safety chamber; made of heavy gauge virgin PVC, Accepts optional Sevylor's SBM 12V electric motor, Maximum weight capacity: 600 pounds
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- Label: Sevylor
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- Manufacturer: Sevylor
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- Model: KK65D
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- Product Group: Sports
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- Publisher: Sevylor
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- Studio: Sevylor
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- Title: Sevylor Inflatable Caravelle 3 Person Boat Kit
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- UPC: 089736201707
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Avg Customer Rating: 
Product Description: A classic all-around inflatable boat, this moderately priced, three-person Sevylor Caravelle inflatable boat (model KK65D) is a great choice for recreational outings with the family. It comes complete with a foot-operated air pump and a pair of oars. In production for over 37 years, the Caravelle was the first Sevylor boat to feature the DIN safety chamber, which inflates inside the main outer chamber and will help keep you afloat if the outer chamber suffers a major hole. It can accept Sevylor's optional SBM 12V electric motor. Other features include a handy repair kit, tunnel chambers on the bottom of the boat for support and tracking, and a Boston valve. Specifications: - Length overall (LOA): 7 feet, 10 inches
- Beam: 4 feet, 7 inches
- Weight: 9.5 pounds
- Maximum engine power: Sevylor 12-volt SBM
- Capacity: 3 persons
- Weight capacity: 600 pounds
About Sevylor In 1948 in Vitry, a small suburb of Paris, France, Berco Grimbert created an electronics company called Societe Electronique de Vitry, or SEVY for short. Soon, a friend of Grimbert's from New York commissioned SEVY to produce high frequency welding machines capable of fusing a new material called PVC (poly vinyl chloride). SEVY's machines worked very well and the American friend developed a very successful business manufacturing swimming pool related products. He then taught SEVY how to work with PVC. One of the first PVC products SEVY produced was inflatable bathtub called Dou Dou. It was an instant hit in postwar France--mothers could bathe their children even where no facilities were available. The media hailed Dou Dou as a significant invention. Soon, SEVY added small pools and flotation devices such as rings, beach balls, and inflatable swim jackets to its product line. Safe, hygienic products, made of PVC and designed for portability, durability and convenience, became the SEVY trademark. The company quickly outgrew its small facilities in Vitry. Mr. Grimbert accepted an attractive offer from the French government to take over a defunct textile factor in the tiny Alsatian village of Buhl. After establishing its new headquarters, the company added the letters "lor" to its name, and became Sevylor. In French, l'or means gold. By coincidence, or possibly fate, Sevylor has proven to be "as good as gold" to its owners, retailers, consumers, and employees.
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