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Brian D
 
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Default Bow eye placement- glass hull cruiser.

Ideally, the bow eye lands just below the bow roller on the trailer, and the
winch pulls the bow eye to this point. The boat should be sitting on the
forward fairbody roller (f'w'd' keel) and if anything, the winch should
slightly tend towards lifting the bow as it pulls tight against the bow
roller (but should not 'carry' the boat.) Most bow eyes are a little above
the waterline and you adjust the trailer to fit the boat, not vice versa.
You will not 'catch' the bow eye on the roller when launching because long
before the boat floats off or tips off the back end of the trailer, it will
have moved back a little and the bow eye clears everything. Good luck.

Brian D

--
http://www.advantagecomposites.com/tongass -- My 22' Tolman Skiff project



..
"Donny" wrote in message
...
Hi folks,

Been a while, I'm restoring my '74 Trojan Sea Raider 25'.

www.picturetrail.com/sixbennetts

http://thebayguide.com/rec.boats/donny_bennett.html

I've come to the point where I have to install a bow eye. The boat
fits the trailer perfectly now after a little bunk adjustment. The
transom meets the end of the rear bunks perfectly. The front bunks
support either side of the keel up from.

At the front, the winch tower roller, (single), meets the point of the
bow about a foot above the water line. The winch cable is under-wound
on the spool, meaning it comes out underneath, and under the roller.

In relation to where the roller contacts the bow point, where should I
drill for the bow eye, and why? My common sense tells me it should be
below so that as the rear of the boat lifts when launching, the eye
won't get caught on the roller. If so, how far?

Thanks folks!

Donny