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![]() James W. Sloan wrote: I'm getting near completion of a boat restoration project and will soon need a trailer. How can I go about determining if a particular trailer will fit my boat (17 ft. v-hull)? Are there some basic guidelines posted someplace or is it a trial and error thing? Thanks....James -- I don't know if there is such a thing as a *standard* protocol for this, but this is what I've done. First, make sure all of your centerline (keel) rollers are the same height (level?) and working. With a tape measure I have checked the placement of side rollers (bunks?) using the winch stand as my reference point. This assumes you will winch the boat up to the winch stand/post, and that it has a roller or "v" shaped piece of padded material to snug the stem up too. Visualize taking a plum bob and dropping a reference point on both the boat and trailer on the centerline/tongue, and measure the location of the side rollers at the back end of the trailer. Say that they are 14 feet from the starting point under the winch. With the boat level, measure the difference between the keel level and the height of the contact point on the rising bottom. If the side rollers/bunks are 3 feet off to the left and right of the center of the trailer, you need to measure the amount of rise created by the "V", at that point, 14 feet back from your reference point (the winch or stem). If you measure it at, say, 18 inches, at a point 3 feet out from center, I would set the rollers/bunks for the initial loading at about 14 inches. Why? Because you want the bulk of the weight resting on the keel rollers, not on the side rollers, so initially I have set the trailer up a little "loose". It really the same thing as setting poppits to steady the boat in the yard, but not carry the weight. Once you have set the rollers/bunks approximately, and loaded the boat the first time, you can level the boat, adjusting the various rollers one pair at a time. This seems a lot harder to explain than it is to actually do. You might want to check and be sure all the nuts and bolts involved are capable of being adjusted, or turned, prior to getting the boat on top of them, particularly if the trailer has been backed into salt water on a regular basis. There may well be a much easier way to do this, that will have me smacking my head when I read it ![]() Good luck, Jonathan I am building a Dudley Dix, Argie 10, for my daughter. Check it out: http://home.comcast.net/~jonsailr |
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