The Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 vs Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 comparison sits squarely in the category of decisions where specs alone won't tell the whole story — intended use, storage, and long-term ownership costs all factor in.
Size is the most obvious dividing line here. The Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 measures 23,0 feet overall (2007), giving it roughly 4,0 additional feet of deck space compared to the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 at 19,0 feet (2007). Weight tells a clearer story for trailering families: the Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 tips the scales at 2 017 lbs — 572 lbs less than the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 at 1 445 lbs. That difference is meaningful if you're working within a half-ton or three-quarter-ton truck's tow rating, especially once you factor in a motor, gear, and fuel.
The power gap is worth calling out. Rated to 150 hp, the Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 has a 75-hp advantage over the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007's 75-hp ceiling — enough to notice on acceleration and at cruising speed, particularly with a full passenger load. Both carry nearly identical fuel loads — 24 gal and 24 gal — so range won't be a tiebreaker here.
For family outings this is probably the sharpest distinction between the two. The Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 is rated for 13 passengers, while the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 caps at 9. If you're regularly pulling extended family or a group of friends onto the water, the extra seats on the Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 could be the deciding factor.
At this size, power-to-weight ratio matters more than outright horsepower. The Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 comes in at 13 lbs per hp versus 19 lbs per hp for the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007. The lower the ratio the more explosive the acceleration — meaningful on a short RIB where bursts of speed, quick planing, and agility in surf or tight waterways define the experience.
Both are inflatable designs, which means they pack down for compact storage, can be carried in a bag, and are dramatically lighter than equivalent rigid hulls. The trade-off is setup time and the need to monitor tube pressure regularly. Tube diameter differs: 23 in on the Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 vs 23 or 25 in on the Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 — larger tubes generally mean more buoyancy and a drier, more stable ride.
Bottom line: Choose the Sweetwater SW2386 RE-3 Gate Sport 2007 if your priority is putting more people on the water — it handles 13 passengers and at 23,0 ft it has the deck room to back that rating up comfortably. The Sweetwater SW1980 RE-3 Gate 2007 is the smarter pick if you want a lighter, easier-to-trailer boat rated for 9 that costs less to run day-to-day.