hungupthespikes
Master Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2009
- Messages
- 814
We don't get out much on Lake Erie but when we do it's after sundown when we come in. Last summer there was a fisherman who waited till all the other guys were gone and his boat would not start. I'm sure we could have towed him in, but it started and we just followed him in.
The towboat would be at least an hour. Alone, a mile off shore, I'm not leaving this guy. Lake Erie changes at night and I've been 12 miles out with a bad starter, waiting on the tow with the wind and waves kicking up and not a boat in sight.
Gave me whole new perspective on you guys who go offshore in saltwater.
The question is how big of boat can you tow with a fiberglass boat and just back plates on the cleats, tiedowns, and ski/tube cleat. The Baja 26ft. 454/365 is big enough to pull a lot of boat, but the backing plates, have to have a limit. Is there a rule of thumb? guide lines? how big is too big to tow?
The towboat would be at least an hour. Alone, a mile off shore, I'm not leaving this guy. Lake Erie changes at night and I've been 12 miles out with a bad starter, waiting on the tow with the wind and waves kicking up and not a boat in sight.
Gave me whole new perspective on you guys who go offshore in saltwater.
The question is how big of boat can you tow with a fiberglass boat and just back plates on the cleats, tiedowns, and ski/tube cleat. The Baja 26ft. 454/365 is big enough to pull a lot of boat, but the backing plates, have to have a limit. Is there a rule of thumb? guide lines? how big is too big to tow?