Road King Cole
God
Is it common to “drive your boat” up the trailer? I can see driving it at a slow pace to get it mostly on the trailer or at least lined up properly and then winch it the last few feet, but give it hard throttle to “drive it up?”
Here’s my story;
Being single-handed most of the time with boat, I tie the boat at the dock, go get the truck and put the trailer in the water and then re-position the boat to be near thetrailer. I then pull out the winch cable, connect it to the boat, untie the boat from the dock, move the boat onto the trailer as much as I can, got to the winch and then winch it up. It’s been working great.
What happened yesterday was that a guy had his buddy drive his trailer to the water and then he drove his boat up the trailer. To do this he had to give the engine allot of throttle which then produced a good current which pulled by boat off its tracks just after I was getting back to the winch. I wasn’t able to just pull it back onto track as he kept high throttle for a long time even after his buddy secured the boat. Had my rubber boots on and I walked the beam of the trailer so I could reposition the boat. On the way back to the winch he had finally cut his engine and says to me; “Dude, did you just get that boat?” “Dude, you know you can just drive it up?”
I let him know that I was fine until he produced such a current. Perhaps I wouldn’t have been a little perturbed if:
My boots are “lets say” 18 inches high, when “walking the beam” back to the truck holding the cable, I stepped off where it was “lets say” 18.5 inches deep. The water didn’t look that deep.
I know there is a fine for power reversing off the trailer, I should think the same rule and reason should apply here.
Or, pardon the expression, Am I all wet?
Here’s my story;
Being single-handed most of the time with boat, I tie the boat at the dock, go get the truck and put the trailer in the water and then re-position the boat to be near thetrailer. I then pull out the winch cable, connect it to the boat, untie the boat from the dock, move the boat onto the trailer as much as I can, got to the winch and then winch it up. It’s been working great.
What happened yesterday was that a guy had his buddy drive his trailer to the water and then he drove his boat up the trailer. To do this he had to give the engine allot of throttle which then produced a good current which pulled by boat off its tracks just after I was getting back to the winch. I wasn’t able to just pull it back onto track as he kept high throttle for a long time even after his buddy secured the boat. Had my rubber boots on and I walked the beam of the trailer so I could reposition the boat. On the way back to the winch he had finally cut his engine and says to me; “Dude, did you just get that boat?” “Dude, you know you can just drive it up?”
I let him know that I was fine until he produced such a current. Perhaps I wouldn’t have been a little perturbed if:
My boots are “lets say” 18 inches high, when “walking the beam” back to the truck holding the cable, I stepped off where it was “lets say” 18.5 inches deep. The water didn’t look that deep.
I know there is a fine for power reversing off the trailer, I should think the same rule and reason should apply here.
Or, pardon the expression, Am I all wet?