Another dismal weekend with my boat, or should I say trailer.
Drove the boat about 12 miles to the ramp and when I got there discovered that all the wheels on the trailer were covered with oil/grease. Not good. I felt a hub and it was scorching hot. All four hubs were greased over and were too hot to touch. Obviously the brakes were dragging on the trailer.
I called the dealer and informed the dealer that I was in no position to pull the boat 30 miles to their place of business as the brakes on the trailer would not survive. The dealer told me to put the boat in the water as they could not retrieve the trailer on a recovery truck due to the weight and the possibility of damage.
So I launched the boat and towed the trailer about 4 miles to a place where a recovery truck could pick up the trailer. The trailer wheels hung over one side of the truck so there is no way it could have been done with the boat on the trailer.
Now it started raining, a cold rain. The recovery truck left and I took the boat about 20 miles down river to Blue Springs Marina and had the boat placed in dry storage. My wife arrived with the truck (sans trailer) and took me home and I was soaking wet and cold. Sometimes the rain was so hard I could not see 40 feet in front of the boat.
I had taken the trailer to the dealer in the fall because the surge coupling was acting differently than when I bought the trailer. The dealer said there was nothing wrong. I think that assesment was incorrect.
For some history I ordered the trailer with brakes on both axles. When the trailer arrived there brakes on only the rear axle. The dealer installed new hubs and plumbed the additional brakes using parts from the trailer dealer. Of course they did not paint the hubs and I found different size nuts on the hub bolts. The dealer did fix that problem. The dealer also replaced the surge coupling because of the additional braking requirements.
Somewhere in this process I believe that something was installed improperly or that something failed in the coupling and was causing the coupling to not release.
The trailer has been returned to the factory to be rebuilt. I suspect that new seals will be required. New bearings may also be needed along with new brake pads as they were soaked with oil. The hubs do not have grease but instead use a heavy oil. The oil is kept under pressure by the hubs.
The trailer manufacturer (or boat dealer) will cover the repairs under warranty, will pay for the tow charge (60 miles round trip), and I will also press for the dry storage charges.
It was not a good day. I will not mention the trailer manufacturer until I get the trailer back and see how the repairs have been handled.
The good news is the boat performed well.
Drove the boat about 12 miles to the ramp and when I got there discovered that all the wheels on the trailer were covered with oil/grease. Not good. I felt a hub and it was scorching hot. All four hubs were greased over and were too hot to touch. Obviously the brakes were dragging on the trailer.
I called the dealer and informed the dealer that I was in no position to pull the boat 30 miles to their place of business as the brakes on the trailer would not survive. The dealer told me to put the boat in the water as they could not retrieve the trailer on a recovery truck due to the weight and the possibility of damage.
So I launched the boat and towed the trailer about 4 miles to a place where a recovery truck could pick up the trailer. The trailer wheels hung over one side of the truck so there is no way it could have been done with the boat on the trailer.
Now it started raining, a cold rain. The recovery truck left and I took the boat about 20 miles down river to Blue Springs Marina and had the boat placed in dry storage. My wife arrived with the truck (sans trailer) and took me home and I was soaking wet and cold. Sometimes the rain was so hard I could not see 40 feet in front of the boat.
I had taken the trailer to the dealer in the fall because the surge coupling was acting differently than when I bought the trailer. The dealer said there was nothing wrong. I think that assesment was incorrect.
For some history I ordered the trailer with brakes on both axles. When the trailer arrived there brakes on only the rear axle. The dealer installed new hubs and plumbed the additional brakes using parts from the trailer dealer. Of course they did not paint the hubs and I found different size nuts on the hub bolts. The dealer did fix that problem. The dealer also replaced the surge coupling because of the additional braking requirements.
Somewhere in this process I believe that something was installed improperly or that something failed in the coupling and was causing the coupling to not release.
The trailer has been returned to the factory to be rebuilt. I suspect that new seals will be required. New bearings may also be needed along with new brake pads as they were soaked with oil. The hubs do not have grease but instead use a heavy oil. The oil is kept under pressure by the hubs.
The trailer manufacturer (or boat dealer) will cover the repairs under warranty, will pay for the tow charge (60 miles round trip), and I will also press for the dry storage charges.
It was not a good day. I will not mention the trailer manufacturer until I get the trailer back and see how the repairs have been handled.
The good news is the boat performed well.
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