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- Jul 23, 2011
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before you go any further. get the motor off the boat and make a cradle for the hull
before you go any further. get the motor off the boat and make a cradle for the hull
Since the cap isn't being removed is a cradle necessary? The trailer has rollers which
I've read isn't the best, but I thought I could get away with leaving it on the trailer if the
majority of the cap remained in place... no?
I can see I'm going to have a million questions so it might be time to start an actual
project thread to keep it all in one place.![]()
Roller trailers are notorious for warping the hull if the stringers are out. They only support the hull where the wheels make contact and without the stringers they can make indentations. Even with the cap on. I'd do all you can to try and avoid this.
UPDATE: You don't Have to cut where the drawing shows. It's my recommendation due to it giving you maximum access to the entire transom and it's much easier to repair on the go back. IF your rubrail is not totally brittle it easy enuf to heat it with a heat gun and remove it as well as reinstall it. removing a few rivets from the aluminium rail to get it out of the way is not that big of a deal. However if you don't want to do that the other methods suggested is doable but access to the entire transom could be problematic. Your Boat....Your Choice! It's fiberglass... Sooooo no matter where you cut it WILL BE repairable.
There is actually a thread where MODS are watching and will change the name of your thread for you!
https://forums.iboats.com/forum/othe...moderator-team
You make removing old rub rails sound so simple but there are other considerations not mentioned. More often than not you have to pull the rubber out of the channel to expose the mounting screws or rivets for removal and to install the channel back. When vintage rub rail is pulled out it doesn't always (like hardly ever) just press or slide back in...with lube or heat. Most slide in from the channel ends and it can be most difficult or impossible to slide them out or back in the same way. The mounting channels get beat up, banged up, corroded and constrain movement. Been there on too many old rub rails and is why I try not to cut the deck to hull joints that have good rub rails. Your mileage may vary.
Steve, you don't need to build a separate cradle.... I had good luck just building up some wood bunks between my trailer and the boat and it worked well. My boat was also on a roller trailer and I looking back, I would absolutely not begin the process of removing the stringers unless I had bunk like supports. You will find that with floor, stringers and transom out of the boat, the hull is flexible as a Tupperware bowl.
If the lack of stringers is what will cause the hull to flex, there's so little solid stringer left anywhere on
the boat that it makes me wonder if the flex has already happened with the roller trailer. Or maybe
I should have taken measurements before removing the floor... although it was mostly mush too.
Honestly I'm just running out of room in the driveway to put the boat on a cradle but I'll keep it in
mind that that's the best option.