BigWeakSauce
Seaman
- Joined
- Apr 4, 2020
- Messages
- 50
Good Morning!
18' 1974 Caravelle CIV 19B on a dual axle trailer.
I'm a pure rookie here, just got my first launch/retrieve under my belt last week and while it was successful, it was quite demoralizing and I looked like a moron at the ramp.
The problem: When properly on the trailer, the bow eye sits about 6 inches above the tongue bumper. That's 6 inches up the hull, not up in the air. When retrieving though, the bow eye is about 12 inches BELOW the tongue bumper and even with the trailer in the water as far as I can safely go (tail pipe just out of the water), I can't get the bow eye over that bumper in order to winch her in securely.
We tried to improvise and settle by winching under the bumper and keeping the bow eye below the bumper however when I pulled her onto level ground and the stern had dropped onto the bunks and forced the bow up, the eye was stuck with my winch hook compressed against/under the tongue bumper and sitting too far back on the trailer. The winch was under tremendous pressure too, couldn't undo it at all. Had to drop her back in the water, disconnect the winch, hook it from over the bumper, winch in as much as I could, and eventually we miraculously got her to the perfect spot where the eye was just over the bumper and I used my rubber mallet to pound the bumper into position (it had rotated slightly as the bow eye ran over it).
Something here cannot be right. I'm trying to avoid adjustments to my trailer because the last owner had it that way with no issue, and that's how the boat is properly weighted on the trailer. Moving that tongue bumper would potentially throw off my tongue weight distribution. It's as if I need a 500lb dude to stand on my transom to help lift the bow so I can winch properly.
Has anyone had this issue before? How can I get that bow eye over the tongue bumper? Am I doing something fundamentally wrong with retrieving? Multiple ins and outs of the water isn't reasonable during boating season with crowded ramps. Please help!!!!
Disclaimer, I'm not willing to drive my boat onto the trailer, dragging up only.
18' 1974 Caravelle CIV 19B on a dual axle trailer.
I'm a pure rookie here, just got my first launch/retrieve under my belt last week and while it was successful, it was quite demoralizing and I looked like a moron at the ramp.
The problem: When properly on the trailer, the bow eye sits about 6 inches above the tongue bumper. That's 6 inches up the hull, not up in the air. When retrieving though, the bow eye is about 12 inches BELOW the tongue bumper and even with the trailer in the water as far as I can safely go (tail pipe just out of the water), I can't get the bow eye over that bumper in order to winch her in securely.
We tried to improvise and settle by winching under the bumper and keeping the bow eye below the bumper however when I pulled her onto level ground and the stern had dropped onto the bunks and forced the bow up, the eye was stuck with my winch hook compressed against/under the tongue bumper and sitting too far back on the trailer. The winch was under tremendous pressure too, couldn't undo it at all. Had to drop her back in the water, disconnect the winch, hook it from over the bumper, winch in as much as I could, and eventually we miraculously got her to the perfect spot where the eye was just over the bumper and I used my rubber mallet to pound the bumper into position (it had rotated slightly as the bow eye ran over it).
Something here cannot be right. I'm trying to avoid adjustments to my trailer because the last owner had it that way with no issue, and that's how the boat is properly weighted on the trailer. Moving that tongue bumper would potentially throw off my tongue weight distribution. It's as if I need a 500lb dude to stand on my transom to help lift the bow so I can winch properly.
Has anyone had this issue before? How can I get that bow eye over the tongue bumper? Am I doing something fundamentally wrong with retrieving? Multiple ins and outs of the water isn't reasonable during boating season with crowded ramps. Please help!!!!
Disclaimer, I'm not willing to drive my boat onto the trailer, dragging up only.