Have pier, need boat lift advice

mthieme

Captain
Joined
Oct 6, 2007
Messages
3,270
Re: Have pier, need boat lift advice

Manual raise and lower back-up capability, with wheel, not drill. Yet another good tip.

Thanks, this is money that I'd otherwise be spending on a better boat, so I want the best lift for the buck.

Jim

If you go manual, build it so it's easy to upgrade to electric later.
The manual will eventually get old, and th boat will get paid off sooner or later.
 

BillP

Captain
Joined
Aug 10, 2002
Messages
3,290
Re: Have pier, need boat lift advice

Ok, I'll comment because nobody is posting what I think. I've had two different boat lifts on the same dock for a total of 37yrs. It's hauled various boats up to 22' and approx 5k lbs. The first was built by me except for having the pilings installed by a dock builder. It was manually operated using (2) 2 speed trailer winches. big galv pulleys and SS wire. Winch one a little, then the other. Not really a big deal to raise and lower and was dead nuts simple and cheap. I liked it a lot, never worried about anything on it and kept it for about 20yrs before upgrading(?) to electric power...without remote and no manual backup. All electric is ok and no way do I feel the desire to have a remote. One lingering thought that has crossed my mind many times is to go back manual when the electric one dies...but get one of those large wheel types instead of trailer winches.

More thoughts. The lift is on open water. Open enough to slam the boat hard on cradles and break stuff. I would never use a cradle where it gets rough enough to slam the boat up and down on it. Most of my neighbors have hard cradles and their boats get the crap beat out of them when it's rough. I hear the pounding 300' away and they have to scurry to get the boat up. Those who use straps or slings don't have those problems. I use a cable with hook at each corner of the transom and one or two at the bow depending on whether its a traditional bow or pontoon hull. This style lift requires more effort to hook up than a cradle though.

Regardless of budget, if I wanted a simple, efficient and reliable lift at the lowest cost it would be a manual winch with slings. Electric is fine and dandy but doing it manually is so simple for small boats.

bp
 

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BillP

Captain
Joined
Aug 10, 2002
Messages
3,290
Re: Have pier, need boat lift advice

i don't think the get better than these.

You might have a different view if you had to live with it. IMHO those lifts are the worst type to have. The lift legs typically rest in the water...saltwater and alum or galv = major electroylsis. Ask any dockbuilder how fast those type lifts get wasted and need major $repair$. Well under 10yrs before major rebuild around my neighborhood. The reason most people use them in my area is because they fit in small spaces and in narrow canals where traditional pole lifts can't be built per building codes. In the keys they have that problem and also have issues putting pilings in coral. I have relatives that lived on a canal there and heard what hassles it was to do pilings for their boatlift...basically it ended up being a davit.

bp
 

canoeist

Cadet
Joined
Jun 10, 2007
Messages
19
Re: Have pier, need boat lift advice

Our marina (Lexington SC) has about 10 lifts for sale. Email me and I will send you their flyer if you are interested.
 
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