Re: Rear Tie Downs
myth busters:
straps across the boat (we call them belly bands) will stop the boat from rolling off backwards. I had the bow eye pull out on a boat on rollers; it moved back about 8" and the band held it.
your transom does not have to be supported all the way to the corner; several inches of overhang is normal..Go look at boats on trailers, and boats on lifts.
True that transom straps will rub your boat (they also rub the antifouling paint off) but belly bands rub their pressure points and can even crack the gunwale/rubrail area of contact. Choose your poison, or block/buffer the contacts--easy enough to solve.
Sometimes I take the stern line, tie to stern cleat then wrap trailer frame under the cleat, run the line under the trailer, wrap the frame under the other cleat, then cleat it off. You could tie instead of wrapping, so if you loose one side you still have the other.
One advantage of straps over a belly band is the redundancy. And the straps are really a redundancy to the winch/safety chain, as far as roll-off's are concerned, but some boats need the tie-down for bouncing and shifting on turns.
Although I've been using the ratchet straps for a boat I tie down at the transom, I don't trust them. I don't trailer that boat much but I think I'd prefer ropes I tie myself over the assembly line in China, and will switch next time. For convenience you can make two short lines, have a clip at one end and tie off the other. I used to have a boat that was set up that way.