freeisforme
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2009
- Messages
- 184
I recently picked up a really nice trihull, on a roller trailer. I took it out this week end and found one very nasty feature of loading this thing.
When bringing the boat onto the trailer, the forward outer hulls dip down and contact the fenders. The rollers are above the fenders, and when the boat is fully on the trailer, it sits nearly 6" above the fenders on each side. the keel however sits pretty low as its got a pretty deep V in the middle. The forward crossmember is all the way back. The trailer is rated for a 17-19' boat, the boat is about 17 1/2' long, with a fairly wide 84" beam width. The fenders are 64" wide inbetween, so the boat must go over the fenders, as it would on any trailer due to the hull shape and width. One the boat is about a foot onto the forward set of rollers, the boat again rises up. The boat is just about balanced front and rear with the 50HP Merc on it. It's a light boat and what I ended up doing was simply lifting the bow up till it passed the danger point. I can see marks were its touched the fenders before.
The problem is that the boat doesn't change it's attitude to match that of the trailer till almost fully on. I tried loading deeper, and shallower, no change, the boat still dips into the fenders when loading.
Something I did consider is moving the wheels back farther so that the fenders are protected by the rollers in a way. But that would no doubt make the trailer more than a bit tongue heavy. The trailer sits low, and the roller quads are set only a few inches apart, so the boat don't dip too low, yet the boat still nearly touches the axle tube when loading. I'd like to be able to lower the ride height of the boat on the trailer too, but I have to find a way to get this thing to load which don't jeopardize the hull or trailer fenders.
The boat is light, only about 900 lbs with motor and fuel. It weighed far less than the OEM spec for some reason, but I did remove most of the interior and all it's trim. The only forward weight is the anchor, and two pedestal seats. All else is under the splashwell. (6 Gallon portable tank, bilge pump, and a battery).
Any suggestions?
When bringing the boat onto the trailer, the forward outer hulls dip down and contact the fenders. The rollers are above the fenders, and when the boat is fully on the trailer, it sits nearly 6" above the fenders on each side. the keel however sits pretty low as its got a pretty deep V in the middle. The forward crossmember is all the way back. The trailer is rated for a 17-19' boat, the boat is about 17 1/2' long, with a fairly wide 84" beam width. The fenders are 64" wide inbetween, so the boat must go over the fenders, as it would on any trailer due to the hull shape and width. One the boat is about a foot onto the forward set of rollers, the boat again rises up. The boat is just about balanced front and rear with the 50HP Merc on it. It's a light boat and what I ended up doing was simply lifting the bow up till it passed the danger point. I can see marks were its touched the fenders before.
The problem is that the boat doesn't change it's attitude to match that of the trailer till almost fully on. I tried loading deeper, and shallower, no change, the boat still dips into the fenders when loading.
Something I did consider is moving the wheels back farther so that the fenders are protected by the rollers in a way. But that would no doubt make the trailer more than a bit tongue heavy. The trailer sits low, and the roller quads are set only a few inches apart, so the boat don't dip too low, yet the boat still nearly touches the axle tube when loading. I'd like to be able to lower the ride height of the boat on the trailer too, but I have to find a way to get this thing to load which don't jeopardize the hull or trailer fenders.
The boat is light, only about 900 lbs with motor and fuel. It weighed far less than the OEM spec for some reason, but I did remove most of the interior and all it's trim. The only forward weight is the anchor, and two pedestal seats. All else is under the splashwell. (6 Gallon portable tank, bilge pump, and a battery).
Any suggestions?