LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
My 97X has bottom paint, but don't consider this to be a problem. The boat will never load correctly, because as someone said, the angle to the winch is not correct. However, after the ballast drains and I get on flat ground I do the bump at about 10 mph. If it doesn't come all the way to the v-block, I tighten the winch strap and do it again. The whole procedure adds 2-3 extra minutes and is no work. I'm 75 and I often launch and retrieve by myself.
BTW, I also owned a Mac25 with bunks and it was much harder to bump forward. I sometimes resorted to spraying the bunks with silicone before retrieving.
Walt
BTW, I also owned a Mac25 with bunks and it was much harder to bump forward. I sometimes resorted to spraying the bunks with silicone before retrieving.
Walt
- Sloop John B
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
If you plan to travel any distance with the empty trailer get your tire pressure down to 25 lbs. The 50 lbs. makes it bounce like a baloon. For great distances, on the innerstate for instance, spend time getting weight on the thing, like sand bags.
Where did you gets the $2900 tandem trailer? Is it low for getting in and out of the water? Is it galvanized, or aluminum?
Where did you gets the $2900 tandem trailer? Is it low for getting in and out of the water? Is it galvanized, or aluminum?
- DaveB
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
The only time I trailered my Tandem Trailer empty was from the place I bought it to my launch in Cape Coral, a distance of approx. 85 miles over the back roads and never bounced due to the swing axel that allows smooth conditions on any pot hole or road condition. You can't do this in a single axel trailer.
Dave
Dave
Wind Chime wrote:If you think the trailer is bad with the boat on it ... try pulling the trailing around with no boat![]()
I don't do this often but did it last night. Pulled it across town through the city and a short freeway haul. Man-Oh-Man ... the trailer was bouncing and bucking and banging, all over the place. Didn't matter what speed.
The last time I did this was last year and it did the same thing, and actually threw off one of the bunks. I didn't see it come off or notice until I got home. No idea what happened to it
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SkiDeep2001
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
As a general rule I agree with what SJB says and even if you have the boat on the trailer it is a good idea to reduce the air pressure in your tow vehicle and trailer when travelling a good distance on gravel roads. I know from 30+ years of travel in British Columbia and numerous blowouts,Sloop John B wrote:If you plan to travel any distance with the empty trailer get your tire pressure down to 25 lbs. The 50 lbs. makes it bounce like a baloon.
- Wind Chime
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SkiDeep2001
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
- Phil M
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
I disagree with that idea. Full tire pressure on the tow vehicle and trailer at all times, as you are not going to stop and inflate your tires when you get back on to pavement. Travel MUCH slower (say 25 - 30 mph) on gravel roads, or the rocks will eat your boat bottom. If I remember correctly, my trailer tires are 65 psi.SkiDeep2001 wrote:As a general rule I agree with what SJB says and even if you have the boat on the trailer it is a good idea to reduce the air pressure in your tow vehicle and trailer when travelling a good distance on gravel roads. I know from 30+ years of travel in British Columbia and numerous blowouts,Sloop John B wrote:If you plan to travel any distance with the empty trailer get your tire pressure down to 25 lbs. The 50 lbs. makes it bounce like a baloon.even with new tires,
that gravel roads and fully pressurized tires are not a good mix. Rob
Phil M
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SkiDeep2001
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Phil, to each his own.
After dropping the pressure while traveling hundreds of miles on gravel in BC per trip I went from 1 or 2 flats per trip to ZERO over a 10-15 year time frame. (est.) I carry a 12 volt compressor at all times and always stop and refill to specified pressure when I get back to the main/paved highways. Most gravel roads years ago, and many to this day, would not allow you go faster than 20 to 25 mph, too many ruts and potholes. I'm not talking oiled gravel roads, these were more like unmaintained straight gravel roads. Maybe that is what kept most tourists away from the pristine back country 15-30 years ago.
Times have changed, there seem to be crowds everywhere now.
Rob 
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LOUIS B HOLUB
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Mr Rich's message will probably solve your problem, but if difficulty continues -- just add a little liquid diswashing soap onto the contact areas of the bunks...that Mac X will slide up front beautifully.Hamin' X wrote:You must release the tension on the winch strap, before doing the bump. It pulls down on the bow.
~Rich
Dont forget to empty the ballast before doing the "Mac-bump"
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Pacamac-uk
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Quote........"Switch from a rope to a heavy strap on your winch"............
You need to be careful whatever you use.
I ended up with nasty bruising to my upper arm when my strap tore apart and whiplashed towards me. Very painful but a very impressive bruise for a week or more!
I suspect that a steel wire may have parted company strand by strand and a warning of failure would have been had. If not then it may have taken my arm off or worse.....
You need to be careful whatever you use.
I ended up with nasty bruising to my upper arm when my strap tore apart and whiplashed towards me. Very painful but a very impressive bruise for a week or more!
I suspect that a steel wire may have parted company strand by strand and a warning of failure would have been had. If not then it may have taken my arm off or worse.....
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Retcoastie
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- Gypsy
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Had a friend who lost an eye , when a bow hook straightened out as He was winching the boat onto the trailer.
He had to wear an eye patch for the rest of his life , because the hook not only destroyed his eye , it tore up his eye socket as well.
He had to wear an eye patch for the rest of his life , because the hook not only destroyed his eye , it tore up his eye socket as well.
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Paul S
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
Yup, make sure ALL securing straps are loose, but NOT disconnected, (winch line, safety line, stern strap if you have one). I carry soap and drip dishwashing soap on the bunks..make it a bit easier.LOUIS B HOLUB wrote:Mr Rich's message will probably solve your problem, but if difficulty continues -- just add a little liquid diswashing soap onto the contact areas of the bunks...that Mac X will slide up front beautifully.Hamin' X wrote:You must release the tension on the winch strap, before doing the bump. It pulls down on the bow.
~Rich
Dont forget to empty the ballast before doing the "Mac-bump"
I was wondering why the macbump wasnt working.. then I realized the stern strap was super tight as well as the safety line.. loosened them up, good as gold.
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Paul S
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Re: LOVE THE X - HATE THE TRAILER
I wouldn't use it. I have had great luck with the flat strap. been using it for 25 years on the mac and our old powerboat. As long as it stays flat, you should be good to go.Retcoastie wrote:Would a broken forestay make a good winch cable?
