wrote in message ...
On Apr 1, 2:37 pm, "D-unit"  wrote:
 "Robert M. Gary"  wrote in ...
  I was thinking of taking the new boat to the lake this afternoon using
  my wife's car. She has a FWD Saturn Vue with the factory larger tires.
  It has the towing capacity but a friend warned me that FWD vehicles
  may be more likely to spin out pulling a boat out of the water. The
  car as electronic traction control. If it slips does it help to let
  air out of the tires? I do carry a 10,000 lb tow rope. If someone is
  around and I can't get it out I guess I could ask for a pull, but
  hopefully I won't have to. Any tricks are appreciated, hopefully it
  won't be an issue but I don't want to get stuck.
  -Robert
 I may have a similar issue to deal with this year. I keep a boat (21' Carolina skiff)
 in a neighborhood with a boat ramp. Travel from my place to the ramp
 is 3 blocks. I'd like to *attempt* to load and unload the boat with my
 Honda Accord. (try not to laugh). It would keep me from driving
 a gas guzzler to/from said beach place (approx. 160 miles) *and*
 keep me from having to leave a pickup truck down there solely for
 that purpose which is what I did last year. I don't think loading the
 boat into the water would be a problem. I like to shuttle back/forth
 to the beach house in the Honda for obvious reasons.
 The ramp is not very steep and there's very little tongue weight by
 the trailer.. Ramp wetness would probably be an issue.
 Falling tide = wet ramp
 Rising tide = dry ramp. (most of the time when I would use it)
 db~still trying to decide if this is a good idea.
See my above post... Wind = wet ramp, lot's of traffic does too.
Washed up vegitation, mud, and anything else you can think of makes
for what you are calling "wet ramp", too...
Sliding back down the ramp into the water is not a pleasant thought.
db