We have had a few mishaps this season while loading the boat onto the trailer. The first involved the prop, my wife's itchy throttle hand and the trailer...the trailer won. The end result was a new prop, prop shaft, etc.
The last 2 mishaps happened while loading the boat at ramps we were not familiar with. The private ramp we normally use is very shallow so I have to back the trailer down pretty deep in order to get the boat on and off the trailer.
A couple months ago we were on a different ramp that was much deeper. I backed the trailer down where I normally would based on the front bunks being submerged. Because the ramp was much deeper, one of the guide poles floated off. My wife picked it up in the boat and rather than handing it to me to put back on after pulling the trailer up the ramp a little more, I just had her pull the boat up on the trailer.
I connected the bow strap and winched the boat up but without the guide pole in place the boat started to float off to that side. I straightened the boat up a little, disconnected the bow strap and asked my wife to pull the boat off so that I could put the guide pole back on and pull the trailer a little further up the ramp.
As she backed off, heard a bump and a scratching sound as the boat hit the guide pole mount. It took a little chunk out of the gel coat at the bottom of the transom and left a nice scratch most of the way down the hull. It was not a happy ride home.
Yesterday we were using the public ramp since the private ramp we normally use had just been resurfaced. My wife pulled the boat up on to the trailer and got a little crooked (which she often does). Normally, rather than have her back up and try again (which stresses her and makes the loading not very fun), I let the hull hit the bow bunks and it either straightens itself or I straighten it myself.
Well, this ramp is really deep and since the trailer was so deep in the water, the hull missed the bunks, kept going before I could stop it and the V of the hull rubbed on the trailer. It knocked the gel coat on the V off, exposing the fiberglass for about a 6-8" section. I know everyone wants to see pics but I didn't take any, sorry.
I'm thinking the repairs will be fairly easy for me to do myself. The one on the transom will suck as it is right where the bunk is, but I may be able to just drop the boat in the water and slide it off the trailer about 6" and load it back up. As long as the bow strap is secured are there any issues with that if I am just towing it about 300 yards?
I dont expect the V part of the bow to be that difficult either. I thought about just filling it with Dynaglass (or whatever would be used for Marine applications) and then using a piece of aluminum angle with mold release applied to form the V.
Any thoughts or input? Can the Spectrum Color Gel Coat be sprayed?
The last 2 mishaps happened while loading the boat at ramps we were not familiar with. The private ramp we normally use is very shallow so I have to back the trailer down pretty deep in order to get the boat on and off the trailer.
A couple months ago we were on a different ramp that was much deeper. I backed the trailer down where I normally would based on the front bunks being submerged. Because the ramp was much deeper, one of the guide poles floated off. My wife picked it up in the boat and rather than handing it to me to put back on after pulling the trailer up the ramp a little more, I just had her pull the boat up on the trailer.
I connected the bow strap and winched the boat up but without the guide pole in place the boat started to float off to that side. I straightened the boat up a little, disconnected the bow strap and asked my wife to pull the boat off so that I could put the guide pole back on and pull the trailer a little further up the ramp.
As she backed off, heard a bump and a scratching sound as the boat hit the guide pole mount. It took a little chunk out of the gel coat at the bottom of the transom and left a nice scratch most of the way down the hull. It was not a happy ride home.
Yesterday we were using the public ramp since the private ramp we normally use had just been resurfaced. My wife pulled the boat up on to the trailer and got a little crooked (which she often does). Normally, rather than have her back up and try again (which stresses her and makes the loading not very fun), I let the hull hit the bow bunks and it either straightens itself or I straighten it myself.
Well, this ramp is really deep and since the trailer was so deep in the water, the hull missed the bunks, kept going before I could stop it and the V of the hull rubbed on the trailer. It knocked the gel coat on the V off, exposing the fiberglass for about a 6-8" section. I know everyone wants to see pics but I didn't take any, sorry.
I'm thinking the repairs will be fairly easy for me to do myself. The one on the transom will suck as it is right where the bunk is, but I may be able to just drop the boat in the water and slide it off the trailer about 6" and load it back up. As long as the bow strap is secured are there any issues with that if I am just towing it about 300 yards?
I dont expect the V part of the bow to be that difficult either. I thought about just filling it with Dynaglass (or whatever would be used for Marine applications) and then using a piece of aluminum angle with mold release applied to form the V.
Any thoughts or input? Can the Spectrum Color Gel Coat be sprayed?
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