Bronlonius
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Oct 21, 2012
- Messages
- 145
My boat is a 12' tracker, it came on one of the DIY Northern tool bunk trailers. The trailer is basically 2 bunks, a bow roller, and 2 keel rollers. So far I hate this trailer. I spent a considerable amount of time tweaking the winch stand when I got the boat, the previous owner had mounted the winch way too low, to the point that it was digging the keel into the front keel roller and bending the sprockets on the winch. He also had the bow roller set up under the bow eye(a very bad idea), so I think the low winch mounting was an attempt to keep the bow from bouncing. Anyways, that part is solved, but I still can't seem to get this trailer to work very well when launching/retrieving. It always seems like the boat gets stuck on the bunks when launching, and simply doesn't want to line up correctly when retrieving. Usually I end up pulling the boat out of the water, and then lifting/wrestling the back of the boat so that the weight of it is equal on both bunks. When I got the boat, the bunks were very loose and could swivel/tilt very easily, which made it almost impossible to use. I tightened them up and it's a little better, but by design they still move into the wrong angle as I'm trying to get the boat onto the trailer.
These trailers come as a kit with the 8" wheels, mine has 12" wheels, so I think that part of the problem is that because of the increased height of the bigger tires, the trailer is at the wrong angle for the ramp I'm using. I do not want to put little tires back on, but I'm wondering if anyone has flipped the axle on one of these trailers to help lower it. There's not a lot of room between the inside of the spring and the frame, so I'm worried if I did this that the axle would bottom out on the frame.
Or, is there something I can do with the rollers/bunks that might help? I was thinking of raising the front keel roller, but that would mean yet another re-do of the winch stand, which would need welding because the bow roller is already as high as I can possibly get it. Or would raising the rear keel roller help? It's just barely touching the bottom of the boat, which I believe is the way it's supposed to be.
These trailers come as a kit with the 8" wheels, mine has 12" wheels, so I think that part of the problem is that because of the increased height of the bigger tires, the trailer is at the wrong angle for the ramp I'm using. I do not want to put little tires back on, but I'm wondering if anyone has flipped the axle on one of these trailers to help lower it. There's not a lot of room between the inside of the spring and the frame, so I'm worried if I did this that the axle would bottom out on the frame.
Or, is there something I can do with the rollers/bunks that might help? I was thinking of raising the front keel roller, but that would mean yet another re-do of the winch stand, which would need welding because the bow roller is already as high as I can possibly get it. Or would raising the rear keel roller help? It's just barely touching the bottom of the boat, which I believe is the way it's supposed to be.