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RoyJ
 
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Ya done good on the price

Boat trailers get dunked in the water so the bearings get submerged,
then ignored for years. Don't be surprised if they are toast. Pull the
wheel bearings, clean, inspect, repack with good wheel bearing grease
or, better yet, some marine wheel bearing grease. Your loads and speeds
would allow a few specks of rust on the bearings and races. New bearing
sets run $12 a wheel so if in doubt, replace.

If you haven't packed wheel bearings before, be sure to clean out all
the old grease, then force the new grease into the crack between the
roller retainer and the inner race. Continue until the grease comes out
the other end. Best way is to put a gop of grease in your left plam,
scrape the bearing against your hand. Messy but effective.

Check the tires for major cracks and checks. These are normally sun
checked but too many cracks will require replacement. Again, the tires
are likely to be many years old.

The lights are probably shot, they get broken and/or corroded. Lights
are $10 each, $25 for a full kit with 2 rear lights, 2 side lights,
connector, vehicle pigtail, and all the wire. With this trailer your tow
vehicle tail lights can be easily seen, cops will bust you anyway. If
you try to repair the old ones, getting a clean ground from the light to
the frame to the front of the frame to the tow vehicle can be a real
problem. A bad ground between the trailer and tow will give you some
WEIRD symptoms. Also, make sure your tow vehicle can support trailer
lights, most later model vehicles require an adapter block to avoid
overloading the tail light circuit.

A pair of oars should be available from any marine store.
www.westmarine.com has them, spendy though.

Start looking at electric trolling motors and deep cycle marine
batteries. Your cheap boat will become the proverbial "a boat is a hole
in the water that you throw money into"

Have fun.

Ignoramus25870 wrote:

http://igor.chudov.com/projects/12-f...raft-Seafarer/

I bought a Starcraft Seafarer, 12 foot, with trailer which seems to be
in okay shape, at an estate sale today. After some haggling, I got it
for $120.

It needs oars.

Is that a sensible price?

I also got two fuel tanks and an anchor for $8.

What would you suggest to do to ensure safety of the
trailer. Re-oiling the hubs etc?

I am not the man on these pictures.

I will use this boat to go on a local lake where power boats are not
allowed.

thanks

i