Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Painted or galvanized? Salt water trailers should be galvanized.
And it's a good idea for freshwater trailers too. Trailers are generic. Quality varies. Look at the thickness of the metal in the beams. Shorland'r is one good brand. Calkins was, they retired and sold the biz, and the new ones have a good rep too, but I can't remember the new name. Brands are mostly regional. There are a couple of national brands (Shorland'r, EzLoader, a few more). Could there be some electrical contact between the aluminum boat and the trailer? That might cause some galvanic action (mmm, but I think it would eat the boat, not the trailer). -- Chuck Tribolet http://www.almaden.ibm.com/cs/people/triblet Silicon Valley: STILL the best day job in the world. "JW" wrote in message ... I have a 1997 Princecraft 196 19.5' aluminum fishing/pleasure boat. The trailer is showing a tremendous amount of rust. I suspect the rust may be due to my launching it in sal****er a few times. However, every time I did that I dumped the trailer in freshwater very soon afterwards. Anyways... There's a lot of rust on the outside of the trailer. I can't see inside the trailer shafts but I imagine there's rust in there as well. What to do? Grind the rust off and use POR 15 or something? Or replace trailer? If I replace trailer are there generic trailers for 20' boats or do I have to get it from the manufacturer? Any help will be appreciated. Thanks. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
What's a good sail boat to buy to live on? | Cruising | |||
Along with Chuck's story, here's another one where things went wrong... | General | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
A question about boat weight and displacement | Cruising |