piefoot
Member
I have an old 14' Sea King aluminum boat on a tilt trailer. Not sure of the year. I made the mistake of letting a family friend take my boat out. He drug it over several boulders on an old 4 X 4 goat trail. Long story short, the tilt mechanism broke and the boat and trailer was abandoned on the trail. Needless to say, I was livid and he is no longer a friend. I found the boat and trailer at around 11:00 p.m. and managed to tie the trailer together with rope to limp it home. After a little welding the trailer was fully functional but no longer tilts.
Several years have passed since then. No longer having the benefit of the tilt function, I decided the boat sits entirely too high off the ground requiring me to back out into deeper water to get it to float off the trailer. That or horsing it off by sheer muscle power and dragging it back on with the front winch. The trailer is showing its many years of devoted use and i decided it was time to give it a face lift. In the process, I want to lower the boat. I didn't think to take any "before" pictures, but as you can see in the photo below, the trailer was used for more than just hauling the tinny around.
To get the ball rolling, my son and I lifted the boat off the trailer and leaned it against the garage wall. We proceeded to strip off all the old bunks, rollers, and as much of the old tilt trailer parts as we could. There's a lot of caked on dirt and rust to deal with.
It's a start anyway. More as we go.
Several years have passed since then. No longer having the benefit of the tilt function, I decided the boat sits entirely too high off the ground requiring me to back out into deeper water to get it to float off the trailer. That or horsing it off by sheer muscle power and dragging it back on with the front winch. The trailer is showing its many years of devoted use and i decided it was time to give it a face lift. In the process, I want to lower the boat. I didn't think to take any "before" pictures, but as you can see in the photo below, the trailer was used for more than just hauling the tinny around.
To get the ball rolling, my son and I lifted the boat off the trailer and leaned it against the garage wall. We proceeded to strip off all the old bunks, rollers, and as much of the old tilt trailer parts as we could. There's a lot of caked on dirt and rust to deal with.
It's a start anyway. More as we go.