I don't have a need for the guide-ons. I do have to put my trailer in the
water until all but the top 3" of the fender is submerged, so the wires in
the trailer frame are in the water.
"RichG" wrote in message
m...
Not as removable as your idea, but I mounted my trailer lights near the
top
of PVC uprights (guide-ons) about four feet long. They help me
immeasurably
when launching and more when recovering in a breeze. You have to run the
ground wires up along with the positive leads. Nothing touches the water,
nothing has to be removed.
Works for me.
--
RichG manager, Carolina Skiff Owners Group on MSN
http://groups.msn.com/CarolinaSkiffOwners
.
"wgander" wrote in message
news:TODyd.479$Q%4.123@fed1read06...
If you have trailer lights mounted to a board that you fasten to your
boat
while trailering, please tell me how you made it.
After six years of trailering, I'm finally tired of the constant wiring
maintenance requirements of trailer lights that get dunked in salt water
several times a week. It's not the light bulbs - they're the
encapsulated
kind; so changing to LEDs wouldn't have any effect on the wiring
requirements.
I have a spare set of trailer lights but the mounting bolts are only an
inch
long. While I could counter bore a hole in the wood I mount them to, I
wonder if you mount them to metal which is then fastened to the wood.
I plan on wrapping the wood with carpet to avoid scraping the gunwales
and
using bungees to hold it to the trailer.