#2
Post
by BobG » Fri Mar 27, 2015 9:59 am
Where my stealership killed me, was trailer balance.
I didn't know better, and they just hooked the trailer to my truck, and off I went on an 1,100 mile trip home.
The trailer was so squirrely, it was absolutely traumatic.
The cause? They had not placed the bow stop at the correct place on the trailer, and therefore the boat was too far back on the trailer, causing the tongue weight to be just about ZERO.
Your tongue weight should be about 10% of the boat and trailer weight. My boat and trailer weigh about 3,800 pounds, so my tongue weight should be about 380 pounds. You adjust tongue weight as follows:
If the tongue weight is too low (like mine was) you have to move the bow stop forward, so the boat sits farther forward on the trailer. If you can't move the bow stop any farther forward, you have to move the axles BACK. This is really not that difficult, BUT, if you move the axles, be sure to make sure they're SQUARE. Measure from the tongue to the wheel on each side. They should be the same. If it's a tandem trailer, be sure the distance between the axles is the same on both sides. If it's not, your trailer will EAT tires.
If the tongue weight is too high, just do the opposite of the above.
2012 Tahoe 24' Fish-n-Fun Tritoon, with Mercury 115 HP 4-Stroke
"
Trine SS Cape" (Trying 2S Cape)
Add a battery:
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