Wingnutt
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Jul 16, 2003
- Messages
- 255
Yea I?ve been doing it for over 20 years, BUT this is the first trailer that I?ve owned that floats! The trailer is a 2005 dual axle aluminum ?I? beam trailer. The interesting thing is that those four tires provide enough flotation to keep the trailer suspended in the water and create an undesirable angle to the boat. This makes for a royal pain in the cheeks to launch and recover the boat because...
When the winch and bow roller assembly (one piece welded together) are adjusted to the proper location, the bow pulpit hits the winch hard enough to put a bend in the pulpit until it clears the winch.
Lower the winch and bow roller assembly enough to place them below the bow eye and once the boat is on the trailer the bow eye is past the winch!
A happy medium means that I have to wade out waist deep or deeper and lift the bow of the boat so that the bow eye clears the roller on the winch and bow roller assembly, then proceed to launch or winch the boat into place.
Of course this will be quite a chilling experience for the boys once the water drops below sixty degrees.
We usually go out until late October or early November depending on the weather, so I would really like to find a solution before then.
I?m not sure how much weight I would have to add to the trailer in order to keep it on the bottom, but I?m pretty sure that it would have quite a bit in order to offset the flotation provided by four 15? tires.
Anybody know how much weight a mounted 225/70/15 tire can float? Or how I would go about calculating the amount of weight that I would need to add?
Or ANY other possible solution?
When the winch and bow roller assembly (one piece welded together) are adjusted to the proper location, the bow pulpit hits the winch hard enough to put a bend in the pulpit until it clears the winch.

Lower the winch and bow roller assembly enough to place them below the bow eye and once the boat is on the trailer the bow eye is past the winch!

A happy medium means that I have to wade out waist deep or deeper and lift the bow of the boat so that the bow eye clears the roller on the winch and bow roller assembly, then proceed to launch or winch the boat into place.
Of course this will be quite a chilling experience for the boys once the water drops below sixty degrees.
I?m not sure how much weight I would have to add to the trailer in order to keep it on the bottom, but I?m pretty sure that it would have quite a bit in order to offset the flotation provided by four 15? tires.
Anybody know how much weight a mounted 225/70/15 tire can float? Or how I would go about calculating the amount of weight that I would need to add?
Or ANY other possible solution?