18ft vs 22ft aluminum boat/trailer package weight?

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A 22' long glass boat that is under 1500 lbs is not going to be built very well. I would never use it in any type of rough water. A 20' aluminum boat at 1500lbs will be much stronger, heavier material. Unless fiber glass has a strong skeleton to support it, it can crack with little impact.
When I got this boat, I didn't think it would handle rough water. I was absolutely wrong. This boat is amazing in big water. Very well engineered.

In my experience, aluminum boats tend to crack a lot easier than fiberglass when exposed to rough water, but I admit that my experience is not universal. In the Chesapeake Bay, you USED to see a number of aluminum bay boats back in the 80's and 90's, but not anymore. A bunch of SeaArk boats cracked badly, including one a good friend bought. It spent most of it's life being repaired, and eventually he sold it and got a Parker, which he still has. I don't think the SeaArk dealer is in business anymore. Not that they are bad boats, but the Chesapeake is HARD on boats, especially tinnies.

For truck warranty reasons, I had to weigh my truck, and trailer today, and my estimate earlier was close. Certified weight of the boat and trailer, fully loaded is 4,300 lbs:

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The dealer was accusing me of overloading the truck, so I had to get certified numbers to prove my case. They were also accusing me of making the truck "squat", changing the driveline angles, so I had to take this pic:

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As you can see, the truck is not squatting much. It's level at worst. This truck is rated to tow 11,300 lbs. This trailer is LESS than half of that, and the total boat and trailer weight is 9,840 lbs, almost 1,500 lbs less than what it's rated to tow. This should not be a problem.

It is a pain dealing with car dealers, but now they can move forward to resolve the issues while still under factory warranty. The service tech says the most likely solution will be that they replace my transmission with an updated version. A brand-new tranny would be fine by me!
 
Great info bro. I was told recently by my Dodge dealer my tranny needed to be replaced. I replaced a $90 sensor on tranny and changed the fluid/filters and it’s fine. Dealers can eat my……fill in whatever body part is appropriate.
 
When I got this boat, I didn't think it would handle rough water. I was absolutely wrong. This boat is amazing in big water. Very well engineered.

In my experience, aluminum boats tend to crack a lot easier than fiberglass when exposed to rough water, but I admit that my experience is not universal. In the Chesapeake Bay, you USED to see a number of aluminum bay boats back in the 80's and 90's, but not anymore. A bunch of SeaArk boats cracked badly, including one a good friend bought. It spent most of it's life being repaired, and eventually he sold it and got a Parker, which he still has. I don't think the SeaArk dealer is in business anymore. Not that they are bad boats, but the Chesapeake is HARD on boats, especially tinnies.

For truck warranty reasons, I had to weigh my truck, and trailer today, and my estimate earlier was close. Certified weight of the boat and trailer, fully loaded is 4,300 lbs:

View attachment 121817
View attachment 121816

The dealer was accusing me of overloading the truck, so I had to get certified numbers to prove my case. They were also accusing me of making the truck "squat", changing the driveline angles, so I had to take this pic:

View attachment 121819

As you can see, the truck is not squatting much. It's level at worst. This truck is rated to tow 11,300 lbs. This trailer is LESS than half of that, and the total boat and trailer weight is 9,840 lbs, almost 1,500 lbs less than what it's rated to tow. This should not be a problem.

It is a pain dealing with car dealers, but now they can move forward to resolve the issues while still under factory warranty. The service tech says the most likely solution will be that they replace my transmission with an updated version. A brand-new tranny would be fine by me!
Unless I miss read the post, I was referring to a 22' long fiberglass boat only weighing 1500 lbs as being not that strong. Heavy glass boats are very strong, but heavy. In my 60 years of boating on the great lakes I have saw many boats come and go, just never saw a glass boat that light that was strong. The scale shows that boat at 4300 lbs, a far cry from 1500#.
 
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