It appears that you are not registered yet. Please click here to register for free!
 
Business Calendar Classifieds Community Entertainment Gallery Media Sports Weather
theBubbler
theBubbler Members Classifieds Directory Events Forums More>
  
Go Back   theBubbler > Wisconsin Forums > Wisconsin Sports > Wisconsin WaterSports > Safety tips for trailering your boat
Register or Login:
theBubbler Blogs Features Classifieds Directory Members Quick Links Help


» December 2008
S M T W T F S
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 31 123
» Donate
Contribute to theBubbler!
» Today's Birthdays
marrirdlilding (33)
» Online Users: 158
7 members and 151 guests
Blue Baboon, dgridley, Kens Digital Media, MrKhay, Randymetro, sprout, timlap
Most users ever online was 581, 04-24-2008 at 08:03 PM.
» theBubbler Chatters
Currently Active Chatters: 0
No one is currently using the chat
» Stats
Members: 12,503
Threads: 7,718
Posts: 31,858
Top Poster: keith (6,955)
Welcome to our newest members:
swhitelax
angel1962
hitechweb
horoscope
jellystone
Bonecrusher
JohnZajaros
roy007
cosmic_stars5252
phvang
BigDogDaddy
printed
» theBubbler Store
Amazon Item of the Week for 11/26/2008
Click here to see all of our Featured Products
» Current Poll
What Is Your Favorite Kind Of Pie?
Apple Pie - 6.67%
1 Vote
Blueberry Pie - 0%
0 Votes
Cherry Pie - 6.67%
1 Vote
Blackberry Pie - 0%
0 Votes
Lemon Meringue Pie - 20.00%
3 Votes
Boston Creme Pie - 0%
0 Votes
Key Lime Pie - 6.67%
1 Vote
Pumpkin Pie - 20.00%
3 Votes
Strawberry Pie - 6.67%
1 Vote
Other - What's Your Pick? - 33.33%
5 Votes
Total Votes: 15
You may not vote on this poll.
» Adopt A Pet
» Sponsor




Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 02-21-2006, 10:44 AM   #1 (permalink)
State Representative
 
Name: Alumni Club
Join Date: Apr 2007
County: Other
Posts: 3,012
AlumniClub will become famous soon enough
Classified Rating: 0% (0)
Recipes: 0
Links: 0
Safety tips for trailering your boat

Choose the proper trailer for your boat. More damage can be done to a boat by the stresses of road travel than by normal operation. A boat hull is designed to be supported evenly by water. When transported on a trailer, your boat should be supported structurally as evenly across the hull as possible. This will allow for even distribution of the weight of the hull, engine and equipment. It should be long enough to support the whole length of the hull but short enough to allow the lower unit of the boats engine to extend freely.

Rollers and bolsters must be kept in good condition to prevent scratching and gouging of the hull.
Tie-downs and lower unit supports must be adjusted properly to prevent the boat from bouncing on the trailer. The bow eye on the boat should be secured with either a rope, chain or turnbuckle in addition to the winch cable. Additional straps may be required across the beam of the boat.
The capacity of the trailer should be greater than the combined weight of the boat, motor, and equipment. The tow vehicle must be capable of handling the weight of the trailer, boat, equipment, as well as the weight of the passengers and equipment which will be carried inside. This may require that the tow vehicle may need to be specially equipped with a(n):

Engine of adequate power.

Transmission designed for towing.

Larger cooling systems for the engine and transmission.

Heavy duty brakes.

Load bearing hitch attached to the frame, not the bumper. (Check your vehicle owner's manual for specific information.)


Check Before You Go Out On The Highway

The tow ball and coupler are the same size and bolts with washers are tightly secured. (The vibration of road travel can loosen them.)
The coupler is completely over the ball and the latching mechanism is locked.
The trailer is loaded evenly from front to rear as well as side to side.
Too much weight on the hitch will cause the rear wheels of the tow vehicle to drag and may make steering more difficult.
Too much weight on the rear of the trailer will cause the trailer to "fishtail" and may reduce traction or even lift the rear wheels of the tow vehicle off the ground.
The safety chains are attached crisscrossing under the coupler to the frame of the tow vehicle. If the ball were to break, the trailer would follow in a straight line and prevent the coupler from dragging on the road.
Check that the lights on the trailer function properly.
Check the brakes. On a level parking area roll forward and apply the brakes several times at increasing speeds to determine a safe stopping distance.
The side view mirrors are large enough to provide an unobstructed rear view on both sides of the vehicle.
Check tires (including spare) and wheel bearings. Improper inflation may cause difficulty in steering. When trailer wheels are immersed in water (especially salt water), the bearings should be inspected and greased after each use.
Make certain water from rain or cleaning has been removed from the boat. Water weighs approximately eight pounds per gallon and can add weight that will shift with the movement of the trailer.
Towing Precautions
Allow more time to brake, accelerate, pass, and stop.
Remember the turning radius is also much greater. Curbs and roadside barriers must be given a wide berth when negotiating corners.
Prior to operating on the open road, practice turning, backing up, etc. on a level uncongested parking area




GB2

Source: www.brokeboats.com
Copyright 2001 Broke Boats ® All Rights Reserved
Bear in mind that I don't charge or make a profit answering questions so when you order a bouy/keychain it does help to keep this service free!!! Thanks to all.
http://www.brokeboats.com/keychain.html
AlumniClub is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!
Reply With Quote
Sponsored links
Reply

Tags
safety, tips, trailering, boat

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
THIS HALLOWEEN: TOP 10 SAFETY TIPS AJE Dogs 5 10-28-2008 05:18 AM
Bridge Safety Concern AJE General Wisconsin Conversation 3 08-06-2007 03:03 PM
Furnace Safety AlumniClub Break Room 0 03-06-2006 11:37 PM
Ice Fishing Safety AlumniClub Fishing! FishOn! Wisconsin Fishing Forums 0 02-21-2006 11:06 AM
Now is time to plan for boating safety courses AlumniClub Wisconsin WaterSports 1 02-11-2006 03:45 AM


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 01:07 AM.

Business Calendar Classifieds Community Entertainment Gallery Media Sports Weather

theBubbler.com
POWERED BY OnYourMark, LLC.
22603 West Main Street
Sussex, WI 53089
Phone: 262-820-8201
Fax: 262-820-8202
Call Toll Free: 1-800-747-3399
info@thebubbler.com
OnYourMark, LLC is a full-service web design, production, programming, hosting and Internet marketing company with audio, photography and video services in our studio on Main Street in Sussex, Wisconsin or at your location.

We serve clients in industry, healthcare, eCommerce, professional services, real estate and construction, information services, hospitality, advertising agencies, and more...throughout Wisconsin and the USA. Please contact OnYourMark for a free, no-obligation consultation about increasing your inquiries and sales while decreasing your costs via the web.
Copyright © thebubbler.com | All Rights Reserved Privacy Statement


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.7.3
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Powered by vBadvanced CMPS v3.0.1
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.2.0

Free Classifieds for Wisconsin People and Businesses - Free Wisconsin Want Ads - Free Wisconsin Classified Advertising -Ad Management by RedTyger