The 10 Best Towable Tubes

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This wiki has been updated 36 times since it was first published in September of 2015. If the idea of flying across the water at breakneck speeds on a precarious raft sounds good to you, you'll want to take a look at these towable tubes. All you need now is access to a power boat. Please ensure all riders wear life vests at all times, and that the towing vessel never goes above the manufacturer's recommended speed limit. When users buy our independently chosen editorial selections, we may earn commissions to help fund the Wiki.

1. Wow Sports Bingo

2. Airhead Blast

3. SportsStuff Chariot Warbird

Editor's Notes

April 18, 2019:

There are so many ways to enjoy flying across the water, so we made sure our list covered diverse shapes and designs, offering a range of ways to enjoy catching air and surfing wakes. For those not quite comfortable with the standard donut-shaped tube and looking for something that feels more stable, the Wow Sports Bingo, Airhead Mach 1, SportsStuff Super Mable, and SportsStuff Chariot Warbird are all excellent options. Each features a design that holds the rider more securely in place than the traditional tube, so there's less fear of falling off during sharp turns or going over large waves. Of course, for those who do want that classic thrilling tubing experience, there's the Airhead Blast, Wow Sports Thriller, and Rave Sports Razor. You'll really feel the action on these. If you have a sense of humor or just want to be the tube on the lake that catches everyone's attention, the Airhead Hot Dog has you covered, and it will let three friends ride at once. The SportsStuff Poparazzi will also turn heads, since one person can stand and steer it, almost like a speed boat, creating quite a rush for the riders lying beneath the tower.

4. Wow Sports Thriller

5. Rave Sports Razor

6. Airhead Mach 1

7. SportsStuff Poparazzi

8. SportsStuff Super Mable

9. Airhead Hot Dog

10. SportsStuff Stunt Flyer

Waking Life

So, for all its peacefulness, the water can get a little boring after a time.

It's a peaceful feeling on the water. The currents ripple gently against the hull of your boat, eliciting that intermittent slap of water on wood; the sun pours down its warmth uninterrupted and the soft wind sends cool blankets of refreshment over your skin. This is, perhaps, the closest that the living ever get to heaven. But, like David Byrne says in The Talking Heads song 'Heaven,' "Heaven, Heaven is a place, a place where nothing, nothing ever happens."

So, for all its peacefulness, the water can get a little boring after a time. To spice things up, we add a little speed and a little danger. We add a towable tube to the picture. What makes a towable tube so enjoyable is its unique ability to maximize the potential for fun created by the movement of the boat in front of it. These tubes attach to their leading boats by a line, usually nylon rope.

The tubes themselves are made of reinforced nylon and polyester materials that can withstand unexpected impacts against debris in the water, as well as the clambering and scratching of joyfully terrified passengers. Most towable tubes also include an electric pump, so you won't spend half the day on the shores, turning blue in the face as you try to inflate it manually.

When the driver of your leading boat takes you on a fast and tortuous journey across the water, your tube will repeatedly cross the wake like a ramp, and its light frame and soft materials will send you aloft in thrilling jumps. The best among our tubes will have a tapered design in the front, as well, which helps prevent a phenomenon called submarining, where the front of your tube dips under the water and creates a heavy drag on the leading boat, while possibly throwing you from your seat.

If you're not into the thrilling jumps and flights you can easily achieve when crossing the wake of your leading boat, you can always tow behind a boat moving much more slowly, or just set the kids out on the tube so you'll have the nicer boat to yourself.

Fit For A King, And His Queen, And Their Kids

If you were paying attention to the above explanation, you'll know now that a towable tubes flight potential–the degree to which you're liable to find exhilaration on it–depends a lot on its weight. Lighter tubes will get more out of the wakes they cross.

If you know you want to cut wakes and fly through the air, you ought to look for the most dynamic design out there.

Like a good snow shoe, however, if your tube is wide enough, it can distribute more weight across its surface and provide you with just as much fun, even if it's carrying an extra passenger or two. Conversely, if you overload a towable tube, cramming six passengers where there's really only space for four, the extra weight will slow down and render your tube ineffective as well as dangerous.

The first thing to look at, then, when evaluating these towable tubes against one another, is their capacity. If you're a bachelor, or a married couple who is so dead-set against having children that you've both been spayed and neutered respectively, you can get away with a smaller tube.

The procreators among us, on the other hand, should err on the side of a larger tube. You can always recruit a nearby swimmer or a passenger on a passing boat to join you and even out the load, should you need. It's a great way to make friends on the water.

Some of these tube are better deigned for outrageous performance than others. If you know you want to cut wakes and fly through the air, you ought to look for the most dynamic design out there. If you're more interested in towing along like you've been born aloft on a lazy river, the more traditional tube shapes and loungers are your best bet.

Then, there's the look of the tube to consider. It's a minor consideration for most, but if your image is one of elegance, the towable tubes designed to suit the tastes of a 12-year-old boy fighting his way through puberty probably won't appeal to you.

An Innovative Lazy River

While it may not have caught on in any truly significant way until the 1940s, tubing existed at least as early as the invention of the automobile inner tube. Those inner tubes were the first devices employed by overheated swimmers to wistfully drift along the water.

But it's the inner tube that water-goers began to associate with a certain level of luxury and relaxation.

Rafts of various kinds existed before the inner tube came along, some of which floated on their own, while others hooked up to a leading boat and were towed. But it's the inner tube that water-goers began to associate with a certain level of luxury and relaxation.

That's because of a sort of floating party that took place in July of 1941, when the owner of a nightclub in Wisconsin made a meal of the river that abutted the property of his club. He ingeniously gave inner tubes to about 200 people at his club and set them adrift, drinks in hand, about 45 minutes downriver, where he set up a shuttle to curry them back to the club.

The loop was a massive success, and entrepreneurs mimicked it wherever possible. The popularity of this kind of tubing led boaters to experiment with tubes attached to their vessels with lines of rope, marrying the luxury of tubing with the thrill of water skiing.


Brett Dvoretz
Last updated by Brett Dvoretz

A wandering writer who spends as much time on the road as in front of a laptop screen, Brett can either be found hacking away furiously at the keyboard or, perhaps, enjoying a whiskey and coke on some exotic beach, sometimes both simultaneously, usually with a four-legged companion by his side. He has been a professional chef, a dog trainer, and a travel correspondent for a well-known Southeast Asian guidebook. He also holds a business degree and has spent more time than he cares to admit in boring office jobs. He has an odd obsession for playing with the latest gadgets and working on motorcycles and old Jeeps. His expertise, honed over years of experience, is in the areas of computers, electronics, travel gear, pet products, and kitchen, office and automotive equipment.


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