Question about an old boat trailer
Tim wrote in
:
On Feb 16, 3:36*pm, Jim Willemin
wrote:
I have recently acquired a Michigan Boat Trailer, made by F.A. Long
compa
ny
in Benton Harbor, Michigan (Model DB-16). *It was under a 1959 Lone
Sta
r
runabout. *Anybody know anything about these trailers? *I'd like to g
et it
back in good shape...
I dont' know anything about the Michigan that you're speaking of, but
boat trailers are fairly simple. If the steel isn't rotted out, most
components can be had rather simply, or a welding or machine shop can
make things like replacing rails or fabricating struts etc. rollers
can be had at a marine repair or ebay.
What seems to be the problem with it?
Well, it has kind of a neat design - the wheels are mounted on stub axles
which are themselves attached to a broad U-shaped tubular axle, which
rotates through tubes welded onto the trailer frame. The tubular axle is
connected via a linkage to a fitting in the front (I was told it was a
lever of some kind). When missing lever is moved, the axle rotates, the
trailer frame drops (or the wheels rotate up, take your pick), allowing one
to launch from a shallow ramp. Now, there are some significant bits
missing from this mechanism on my specimen, and I sort of wondered if
anyone if anyone had ever played with one of these and knew (a) what I was
talking about, and (b) how hard it would be to get it functional again. As
it is, the trailer is safe (the linkage is locked in the 'road' position),
but you know how it is when something neat is bust...
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