Excellent and genius for sure. I took the lazy man’s approach and launched my boat at the marina and I simply told the parks rangers that I left the keys home and would have to go back home with the car and trailer. I then worked on the trailer in my driveway and completed all the work in a few hours and went back to the Marina to get my boat. Woo hoo!
I’ve done this too but told them what I was doing and worked on replacing my bunks in the parking lot. It was midday during the week so they didn’t mind.
I've done this with both a 18" Hydra sport and a 20" Procraft. I built an A-frame and placed it about 3/4 from the back of the boat that held the boat with a heavy nylon strap. This way I was able to simply pull the trailer out from under the boat. You just need to make sure you build your A frame wide enough to pull the trailer out.
I had to do this same thing this spring- with an 18 foot Wellcraft. The trailer for my boat was rusty old, the rear perpendicular frame rail broke shortly after landing the boat one day. We made it home, but elected not to push our luck by driving the boat to a nearby body of water, or our local boat dealer. Our local boat dealer kindly gifted us a trailer that he had laying around, and told us how to switch them out with the same process you showed. We blocked up the transom on both sides rather than in the middle, and used two jacks to walk the trailer out from under the boat and switch in the replacement. Luckily the replacement fit OK, and the process went smoothly for me and my brother.
Another way is to use tyres, by keeping the trailer hooked up to the vehicle slowly back the boat off the trailer onto tyres. Once the transom is sitting on the tyres you can go along and drive the trailer out slowly adding more tyres as you go. I did this when I built a new trailer and it worked well.
I built a scaffold and hung my boat with a comalong front and chain block stern as I needed to get the trailer out to swap the side support rollers I had for skids. Can't put up pics but it worked a treat.
What I did with mine was to block the stern much like you did, but for the bow I used and A Frame chain fall. With that set up I just rolled the trailer completely out from under the boat. Then after trailer was gone I lowered the bow one front cribbing. Made getting to the bottom so much easier to paint.
@@liviofazi4017 Sorry I should have said "A" frame and a chain fall, or chain hoist. Kind of the same set up you would use to pull an engine out of a car. The reason I supported the bow with the A frame and hoist was so there was nothing in the way so you can just pull the trailer out. After that I just lowed the bow on to cribbing. The stern was alread supported.
I was unsure how I was going to paint bottom of my boat so had marina lift it and block it up for me while I worked on it. Took me a week. Now I need to do the trailer bunks hence why I’m here, but I am liking the other commenters ideas and either gonna take back down to visitors dock and work on it in lot and pay the fee.
I'd measure the existing bunks and build the new ones in advance and cover them in marine carpet or perhaps not if using plastic ones. Then taking all necessary tools to the boat ramp, then just have a friend drive the boat around while you replace the bunks in the lot.
I want to use the boat-clubs trailer, thus returning it. The trailer seams stuck after this. The style and tone of this video is very good. Nice to listen to.
Just seeing this video. Thank you for this. Never had a reason to lift my boat off my trailer but this would be how I'd do it. Very well thought out. Good Job Sir.
It's amazing what you can do with your boat trailer when it comes to moving things around on your rig that's how I adjusted the transom height of my new in repowered motor on my 21c hunt was by using the trailer jack etc slide the motor up a notch or two on the transom
Did something very similar to get mine up off the trailer so I could redo the bunks. Only significant difference is I cut a "V" into the top block to cradle the hull and a "V" block to go on my floor jack to do the lifting. Was nervous about it when I did it but went very well. Thanks for the video.
Hi.. I have a 25 foot Tahiti day cruise and wanted to get it off the trailer for bottom paint in my work yard. Will a V block in the front with padding be safe to lift without going through the hull? The weight is my worry because I’ve never done it. (3000 pound weight)
Next time, put the front blocks as far forward of any crossmembers as possible. Then scoot the trailer as far forward, and jack the boat up behind the crossmember. Remove the blocking, and scoot the trailer as far forward again and put the blocking back in. That way, you can get the trailer out so you can work on it easily. Another way to do this is to tie the boat to a tree or other solid point. Block up the back of the boat as you did and then slowly pull the trailer forward. Once you get it as far forward as comfortable, jack up the front of the boat and block it up and pull the trailer out. Either way, good job on the video!
I had no idea this was possible without special equipment. We have the same size boat and the bunk boards stick out an inch too far. enough that one time I damaged a sounder sensor when pulling out a boat. Now I know how to replace the carpeting on the bunks and possibly shorten it by 1/2 inch. Thank you
Good idea, last time I did trailer work I just drop boat at the lake let my family played in water few hours while I fixed trailer and came picked them up later
Dug me some 3 to 4 ft holes on both sides of the front of my boat, put some old power poles in the holes, rigged up a strap, and come along , to lift the boat in the strap cradle. Jacked the back up, with a floor jack, put cribbing on both sides of the boat. Trailer needed a complete rebuild.
An easier way. Tie back of boat to something solid. Car, Tree etc. Unwind winch and pull ahead a couple feet. Block stearn, pull ahead until bow is about off. Block bow and drive away. To put back on trailer wet bunks back trailer under bow hook up winch and put vehicle in neutral. Winch trailer under boat.
Add some sheet foam to your lifting point when using the jack.. It takes the sharp edge away and lessens the likely hood of a dent/crack also keeps the boat from sliding on the wood.
I admire your ability to do things such as lifting your boat and I like to share some of my ways to remove the boat and set it on blocks. Here we go, leave the trailer on the truck, determine where you have the room to take your boat off , you need a anchor such as a lite pole or another vehicle strap the boat to the anchor using the tow islets to hold the boat from moving, gather the blocking make your crib at the back below the transom as you did, you can use a hydraulic jack to lift the boat under the transom taking some ot weight off the bunkes using good blocking between the jack and boat as long as you go from starboard to Port, starting from the keel to each side make it wide and it will be stable. Remove the bow strap so the boat is unhooked, making sure you anchor straps are tight gentle pull the trailer out from under the boat if you want you can also take a little weight off the front, you will be surprised how easy it will come off , when you have the back of the trailer about halfway or more make your crib under the middle of the boat again if you need lift the boat higher use your hydraulic jack making sure you have sufficient blocking to support the hull and the weight it doesn't need to be over done, the boat will not tip because it's supported at the transom it will be stable enough to crawl inside of it if need too. Blocking the front you can block under the center keel and not damage the boat the keel can take a lot More weight than you think. I've done this for sixteen years owning my resort in Canada and never had problems removing a boat from a trailer. I did this a hundred times and always had success. Remember the More surface you support the better it is for removing the boat. Happy sailing good luck and God's speed.
What would I do different: two stacks of cribbing on opisite corners of transom to give it a safer tripod stance. Also block the boat as cl9se to the side to side level of trailer to help make adjustments of the bunks as acurate as possible.
I use a metal A-frame to lift the front of the boat up (with a come-a-long) and Jack the back up and use blocks....that way I can pull the trailer out from under the boat...easy as pie. If you don't have a metal A-frame you can make one out of 4x4's and use two 2x12's as the cross beam. (Two A-frames on each side with a beam across the top). The front of most lake boats don't weigh as much as the back and doesn't take much to lift one. But I like (haha) the guy (G M) who left a comment who took the lazy mans approach....but I'd probably have someone take my boat out and go fishing etc. while I was home working on the trailer...but that's if one had a lake near-by. :) For long-term trailer repairs, lower the boat onto a V-shaped box for the front and blocks on each side in the back...yu can also repaint/clean-up the boat bottom too...then just move the V-box and blocks to finish paint. Not rocket science. But there are some stupid people out there who let their boats drop because they didn't HAVE PATIENCE.
I like this idea. Being able to remove the trailer is ideal. My old 16 footer isn’t that heavy, but being able to repaint or clean up the bottom isn’t possible with the trailer there. This guy has a Boston Whaler though…awesome fiberglass boat, so not to much bottom maintenance.
Luckily, I was able to do the bottom paint and trailer bunks without pulling the trailer out. If I needed too, I would have walked the trailer out by lifting the front like you did. You are absolutely correct in that you have to have patience when doing something like this!
You could tie rope on the rear of boats eye hooks then tie other end to a tree unhook all straps and winch drive boat fwd until its halfway off trailer do what needs to be done then winch back boat to its correct resting spot..can paint bottom n repair or reinstall rollers
Hey Joe, how’s it going thanks for the video I have a 18 foot deep the aluminum tracker and it has several long cracks on the starboard hull. I was going to use some no flux needed low working temperature aluminum brazing rods to fix the cracks but I’m having a hard time because some of the cracks right where the bunk is. With the procedure that you used in that video work just as well for a v hull? Also, I’m wondering is there foam on the other side of the hull or is it open. I don’t want to burn anything. Thanks thanks, Chris
I don't see why it wouldn't, this procedure is used by a lot of folks in boating across many different craft, I am not sure about the tracker so cant really say
Genius?!‼️⁉️ I love Boston whalers, providing your motor cranks up....wouldn't it have been easier to drop it in a Lake boat ramp somewhere close by?! That looks Extremely Dangerous ‼️
Most boats don't have that flat area at the transom, that made this one easier than most. The worst one I did was my flybridge cruiser, de-trailering 10,000 pounds of boat is a challenge and scary.
I figured the similar system with a small boat. I used auto jack stands with wood on top and rubber mat for the aft part of the boat. When I lift the boat up in. the front the boat comes completely off the bunks. So no need for support in the front. I just use a rope to hold the up the front part of boat with the rope tied to the trailer. This allows me to clean the hull were the bunks touch the hull and adjust the bunks if need be.
I noticed you have a garden hose flushing port on your outboard, with what looks to be a quick connector. I'd be very interested in what you did there. Does it have some sort of back-flow preventing valve? Maybe do a video on it. Thanks.
So you are not moving the trailer as much as you are working on it in place, is that correct because I need to get boat up and put the whole roller assembly in place from front to back, trailer has none, as well I have to rebuild the running boards any suggestions?
I would suggest a fitted cradle made out of wood. It would take a bit longer to build, but would provide more lateral stability. I don't like the idea of a V shaped hull on flat keel blocks. On the other hand we hoisted the Potomac and placed it on keel blocks after the Navy divers raised her when she sunk off of Treasure Island (FDR's "floating white house at the Port of Oakland). The wood keel blocks and wedges worked great but note that the vessel was restrained from tipping with engineered bracing placed at about 45 degree angle (my recollection).
That's good advice and something I gave some thought too as well. I had initially planned on shaping the wood blocks to do that but ended up relying on the two flat spots at the end of the innermost strakes to provide lateral stability. You can see it here at 5:13.
If you need to get the trailer out you would slide it out until the cross piece is close to the blocks, jack the front up and move the blocks behind the cross piece. Depending on the trailer, you may have to do this more than once.
Okay but how do you keep from hitting the blocks when you move the trailer out from underneath the boat won’t you hit the blocks because of the trailer shafts
How do pull you the trailer out . The front part we need figure a new way so we can work on both. But I like the back part blocking . Didn’t think about the center.
I left the trailer under it to do the rest of the work but you can always pull it forward until the cross member almost touches the front blocks, jack it up a bit and move the blocks behind it. Then repeat for each cross member.
Great Video. Thanks !! I've been pondering the use of old but good inner tubes Four to six and air lift in addition to what you have going. Not sure they can handle the weight.
I didn't like my trailer so I took the whole rig to Ameritrail and they built me a brand new custom welded aluminum trailer to fit the boat , works great
Just put the boat in the water by a dock or anchor, marina etc. Much easier than putting it on land. That is doing things the hard way. You could even rent a 2nd trailer for it.
great i dea, i like the fact you didnt have to nail all the wood together just to use only for a short while...i'll do the same thankyou for the vid...from new zealand
It is, that is why I don't recommend anyone do it this way. However, if you have to re -do the bottom paint, there's not a lot of other options without heavy equipment. I will say that I took all the necessary precautions and never took it off the trailer, just lifted it enough to redo the bottom paint.
Why mess with the pavers? Just jack up the axle on one side. If you want to make it perfectly level measure the distance needed to raise the axle then jack it up that high. If you want blocks under the tire you can add them after you jack it up. BTW, a set of ramps are handy to have around.
That's why I was watching.you need to leave a bit of room so you can pull the trailer forward, then jack up the front again, and keep moving the trailer as you disassemble and reassemble two sets of cribbing.
I tied mine to a tree and slowly pulled the trailer from under it. MY trailer looks like yours but no bunks has rollers just used blocks and it sat on blocks Needed trailer to pick up another boat
I left the trailer under it to do the rest of the work but you can always pull it forward until the cross member almost touches the front blocks, jack it up a bit and move the blocks behind it. Then repeat for each cross member.
I'll tell you a much easier way. I'd get someone else to do it 😂. It was during the off season the last time I had to swap bunks on a pontoon trailer. We launched it , tied it up. I brought a Genset with a full set of tools, vynal fence post already covering the bunks. Just had to cut to fit , and install. The ranger stopped by , n drank coffee with us while we worked. He loved the ingenuity. Tho the next ranger could have written us a ticket. Just luck of the draw , I wrecken.
Gonna have to put on bottom paint on mine too soon .. and re carpet the bunks... maybe replace the bunks entirely. I'm not sure yet.. I have an uneven ground surface I'm dealing with aswell. Little nervous to try this on my boat ... but I think it will work. It's a white water center console .. 17ft. . Big and wide for a 17ft
@@ExtremeDIYGuy wrong, you crawl under the trailer, remove the top layer of gel coats, apply your bottom paint everywhere but where the bunks are, and once the new bottom paint you put on has cured, you put the boat back on the trailer 1 foot off center, and then put the bottom paint on the areas where the bunks were. Just have to think a little bit.
You could have secured the rear of boat pull it far forward then block up the bow and pull the trailer all the way out but rear would need corners blocked up then paint bottom and redo trailer JT
Why not gather the materials for the build and take everything to a launch, launch the boat, tie it up, park the trailer and fix everything in the parking lot, then load the boat back on?
Do you use a lot of duct tape too? You over engineered your “cribs” with way too much wood instead of building a frame stand that would be more stable, require less wood, provide more height, and allow simpler adjustment to uneven ground. Just completed the same process with only two 10”X2”X10’ and one 2”x4”x8’ to build the cradle.
A very good friend of mine was crushed to death a few weeks ago in Ohio working under his vehicle when a jack stand failed. Boats, in this manner, won't have any mercy, either, should "something" go amiss. BE VERY CAREFUL, y'all.
@@ExtremeDIYGuy He probably meant the metal ramp for lifting cars, like Pittsburgh ramp set and such. They don't come with variable height, so your method is valid, I think.
What a hassel that is. I have got plenty of boats off the trailer just lift the front of the trailer up & let the boat slide back (onto lawn not driveway) let it go back slowly on winch & use car to pull the trailer out from under the boat with a piece of rope tied to safety chain (don't have rope too short else when it gets to the end of the boat the trailer will come forward & hit your car. a second person can slowly let out the winch rope if you are scared it will come off too fast. to get boat back on just winch it back. I have done boats up to 24 feet long like this.
@@mikereimer5419 I am usually getting it off to do something to the trailer, but when I paint under I use my forklift to tip the boat on its side then I can paint standing up. I guess you could still put it on four bales of hay as you got it off the trailer if you want it up a bit. Sometimes if the trailer rollers are rusty I tie the stern of the boat to a tree before towing the trailer from under.
Excellent and genius for sure. I took the lazy man’s approach and launched my boat at the marina and I simply told the parks rangers that I left the keys home and would have to go back home with the car and trailer. I then worked on the trailer in my driveway and completed all the work in a few hours and went back to the Marina to get my boat. Woo hoo!
That was going to be my idea as well but my local lake wouldn't approve
I’ve done this too but told them what I was doing and worked on replacing my bunks in the parking lot. It was midday during the week so they didn’t mind.
Shouldn’t ask, because no ONE owns the water. We pay taxes for stuff like this
-Lazy man’s approach- = *cheap dishonest man’s approach*
....just pay the $15.00 geez...
😂😂😂😂
I let my brother fish that day with my boat.....went home and worked on the trailer.
I've done this with both a 18" Hydra sport and a 20" Procraft. I built an A-frame and placed it about 3/4 from the back of the boat that held the boat with a heavy nylon strap. This way I was able to simply pull the trailer out from under the boat. You just need to make sure you build your A frame wide enough to pull the trailer out.
I had to do this same thing this spring- with an 18 foot Wellcraft. The trailer for my boat was rusty old, the rear perpendicular frame rail broke shortly after landing the boat one day. We made it home, but elected not to push our luck by driving the boat to a nearby body of water, or our local boat dealer. Our local boat dealer kindly gifted us a trailer that he had laying around, and told us how to switch them out with the same process you showed. We blocked up the transom on both sides rather than in the middle, and used two jacks to walk the trailer out from under the boat and switch in the replacement. Luckily the replacement fit OK, and the process went smoothly for me and my brother.
Sounds like you were able to successfully switch trailers, that's great to hear!
Another way is to use tyres, by keeping the trailer hooked up to the vehicle slowly back the boat off the trailer onto tyres. Once the transom is sitting on the tyres you can go along and drive the trailer out slowly adding more tyres as you go. I did this when I built a new trailer and it worked well.
That didn't occur to me it could be done that way. Thanks for the insight!
I built a scaffold and hung my boat with a comalong front and chain block stern as I needed to get the trailer out to swap the side support rollers I had for skids. Can't put up pics but it worked a treat.
Scaffolding would certainly work!
What I did with mine was to block the stern much like you did, but for the bow I used and A Frame chain fall. With that set up I just rolled the trailer completely out from under the boat. Then after trailer was gone I lowered the bow one front cribbing. Made getting to the bottom so much easier to paint.
Thanks for sharing.
Ohh what is an A frame chain fall...got a pic....with my gantry I was able to flip an 18 ft Tuffy for some gelcoat and fiberglass repairs.....
@@liviofazi4017 Sorry I should have said "A" frame and a chain fall, or chain hoist. Kind of the same set up you would use to pull an engine out of a car. The reason I supported the bow with the A frame and hoist was so there was nothing in the way so you can just pull the trailer out. After that I just lowed the bow on to cribbing. The stern was alread supported.
I was unsure how I was going to paint bottom of my boat so had marina lift it and block it up for me while I worked on it. Took me a week. Now I need to do the trailer bunks hence why I’m here, but I am liking the other commenters ideas and either gonna take back down to visitors dock and work on it in lot and pay the fee.
Shouldn't take too long to redo them. Good luck!
I'd measure the existing bunks and build the new ones in advance and cover them in marine carpet or perhaps not if using plastic ones. Then taking all necessary tools to the boat ramp, then just have a friend drive the boat around while you replace the bunks in the lot.
I want to use the boat-clubs trailer, thus returning it. The trailer seams stuck after this.
The style and tone of this video is very good. Nice to listen to.
Go for it!
Just seeing this video. Thank you for this. Never had a reason to lift my boat off my trailer but this would be how I'd do it. Very well thought out. Good Job Sir.
Glad it was helpful!
It's amazing what you can do with your boat trailer when it comes to moving things around on your rig that's how I adjusted the transom height of my new in repowered motor on my 21c hunt was by using the trailer jack etc slide the motor up a notch or two on the transom
That's ingenuity at at its finest. Awesome!
Did something very similar to get mine up off the trailer so I could redo the bunks. Only significant difference is I cut a "V" into the top block to cradle the hull and a "V" block to go on my floor jack to do the lifting. Was nervous about it when I did it but went very well. Thanks for the video.
I thought about doing that but ended up just doing a straight block, Which worked out.
I just launched mine in the pond.
Hi.. I have a 25 foot Tahiti day cruise and wanted to get it off the trailer for bottom paint in my work yard. Will a V block in the front with padding be safe to lift without going through the hull? The weight is my worry because I’ve never done it. (3000 pound weight)
Once safely blocked and stable, you could remove the trailer tires-rims to gain 10 extra inches of clearance to work and paint.
That's brilliant! Thanks
Great job! Got it done with minimal effort and cost. Thanks for sharing.
Thanks for watching!
Next time, put the front blocks as far forward of any crossmembers as possible. Then scoot the trailer as far forward, and jack the boat up behind the crossmember. Remove the blocking, and scoot the trailer as far forward again and put the blocking back in. That way, you can get the trailer out so you can work on it easily.
Another way to do this is to tie the boat to a tree or other solid point. Block up the back of the boat as you did and then slowly pull the trailer forward. Once you get it as far forward as comfortable, jack up the front of the boat and block it up and pull the trailer out.
Either way, good job on the video!
Thanks for the feedback I'll keep it in mind for future projects!
I had no idea this was possible without special equipment. We have the same size boat and the bunk boards stick out an inch too far. enough that one time I damaged a sounder sensor when pulling out a boat. Now I know how to replace the carpeting on the bunks and possibly shorten it by 1/2 inch. Thank you
Glad I could help!
Good idea, last time I did trailer work I just drop boat at the lake let my family played in water few hours while I fixed trailer and came picked them up later
That wasn't an option at the time, I'll keep that in mind for the future, thanks for the feedback!
Just slide off onto some tyres I did so on my own and winched it back on after trailer repairs piece of cake
Thanks for the feedback.
Awesome idea, I will use it to lift my boat. Thanks
No problem 👍
Dug me some 3 to 4 ft holes on both sides of the front of my boat, put some old power poles in the holes, rigged up a strap, and come along , to lift the boat in the strap cradle. Jacked the back up, with a floor jack, put cribbing on both sides of the boat. Trailer needed a complete rebuild.
Sounds like there are multiple ways to get this done! You could do a lot with that power pole rig, Possible even an engine lift as well!
An easier way. Tie back of boat to something solid. Car, Tree etc. Unwind winch and pull ahead a couple feet. Block stearn, pull ahead until bow is about off. Block bow and drive away. To put back on trailer wet bunks back trailer under bow hook up winch and put vehicle in neutral. Winch trailer under boat.
That sounds like a reasonable way to do it as well.
That's beautiful 👍
I've used this same method a couple times. A whole lot easier working on the trailer bunks, etc. with no boat suspended above it.
Thats how I do it
Shore up the boat then let air out of tires and pull it forward
Add some sheet foam to your lifting point when using the jack.. It takes the sharp edge away and lessens the likely hood of a dent/crack also keeps the boat from sliding on the wood.
Good advice ill keep that in mind for future projects.
I admire your ability to do things such as lifting your boat and I like to share some of my ways to remove the boat and set it on blocks. Here we go, leave the trailer on the truck, determine where you have the room to take your boat off , you need a anchor such as a lite pole or another vehicle strap the boat to the anchor using the tow islets to hold the boat from moving, gather the blocking make your crib at the back below the transom as you did, you can use a hydraulic jack to lift the boat under the transom taking some ot weight off the bunkes using good blocking between the jack and boat as long as you go from starboard to Port, starting from the keel to each side make it wide and it will be stable. Remove the bow strap so the boat is unhooked, making sure you anchor straps are tight gentle pull the trailer out from under the boat if you want you can also take a little weight off the front, you will be surprised how easy it will come off , when you have the back of the trailer about halfway or more make your crib under the middle of the boat again if you need lift the boat higher use your hydraulic jack making sure you have sufficient blocking to support the hull and the weight it doesn't need to be over done, the boat will not tip because it's supported at the transom it will be stable enough to crawl inside of it if need too. Blocking the front you can block under the center keel and not damage the boat the keel can take a lot More weight than you think. I've done this for sixteen years owning my resort in Canada and never had problems removing a boat from a trailer. I did this a hundred times and always had success. Remember the More surface you support the better it is for removing the boat. Happy sailing good luck and God's speed.
Thanks for the input. It seems there are a lot of ways to pull a boat off a trailer, I appreciate your contribution!
Never would of thought of it, been trying to take my boat of trailer
This method works excellent!
What would I do different: two stacks of cribbing on opisite corners of transom to give it a safer tripod stance. Also block the boat as cl9se to the side to side level of trailer to help make adjustments of the bunks as acurate as possible.
Ill keep this in mind for the future!
I use a metal A-frame to lift the front of the boat up (with a come-a-long) and Jack the back up and use blocks....that way I can pull the trailer out from under the boat...easy as pie. If you don't have a metal A-frame you can make one out of 4x4's and use two 2x12's as the cross beam. (Two A-frames on each side with a beam across the top). The front of most lake boats don't weigh as much as the back and doesn't take much to lift one.
But I like (haha) the guy (G M) who left a comment who took the lazy mans approach....but I'd probably have someone take my boat out and go fishing etc. while I was home working on the trailer...but that's if one had a lake near-by. :)
For long-term trailer repairs, lower the boat onto a V-shaped box for the front and blocks on each side in the back...yu can also repaint/clean-up the boat bottom too...then just move the V-box and blocks to finish paint. Not rocket science. But there are some stupid people out there who let their boats drop because they didn't HAVE PATIENCE.
I like this idea. Being able to remove the trailer is ideal. My old 16 footer isn’t that heavy, but being able to repaint or clean up the bottom isn’t possible with the trailer there. This guy has a Boston Whaler though…awesome fiberglass boat, so not to much bottom maintenance.
Luckily, I was able to do the bottom paint and trailer bunks without pulling the trailer out. If I needed too, I would have walked the trailer out by lifting the front like you did. You are absolutely correct in that you have to have patience when doing something like this!
Sweet! I'm looking to do the same thing to refinish my boat. I love the videos my man. Keep em coming.
Will do ! Thanks for watching
Thanks, Dauntless 20 DC / Loadrite duel axle trailer which needs some TLC.
You could tie rope on the rear of boats eye hooks then tie other end to a tree unhook all straps and winch drive boat fwd until its halfway off trailer do what needs to be done then winch back boat to its correct resting spot..can paint bottom n repair or reinstall rollers
That way of doing it had crossed my mind but this ended up working just fine. Thanks for the input!
Hey Joe, how’s it going thanks for the video I have a 18 foot deep the aluminum tracker and it has several long cracks on the starboard hull. I was going to use some no flux needed low working temperature aluminum brazing rods to fix the cracks but I’m having a hard time because some of the cracks right where the bunk is. With the procedure that you used in that video work just as well for a v hull? Also, I’m wondering is there foam on the other side of the hull or is it open. I don’t want to burn anything. Thanks thanks, Chris
I don't see why it wouldn't, this procedure is used by a lot of folks in boating across many different craft, I am not sure about the tracker so cant really say
Ok great thanks for the reply. I’ll get it done safely.
Great idea , I’ll be doing this at some point . !
Level ground would of been much easier in your case but you got it done safe enough …
Unfortunately his was the most level spot in my yard, made it work though. Thanks!
Will this work with a 2301 striper? Dual axle trailer. Is the hull strong enough with just front and back supports?
Good job. Nice tutorial. Good comments. Like the stout blocking. Thanks and take care.
Thanks, you too!
Genius?!‼️⁉️ I love Boston whalers, providing your motor cranks up....wouldn't it have been easier to drop it in a Lake boat ramp somewhere close by?! That looks Extremely Dangerous ‼️
If I were redoing the bunks then yes, but needed to redo the bottom paint.
Most boats don't have that flat area at the transom, that made this one easier than most. The worst one I did was my flybridge cruiser, de-trailering 10,000 pounds of boat is a challenge and scary.
I figured the similar system with a small boat. I used auto jack stands with wood on top and rubber mat for the aft part of the boat. When I lift the boat up in. the front the boat comes completely off the bunks. So no need for support in the front. I just use a rope to hold the up the front part of boat with the rope tied to the trailer. This allows me to clean the hull were the bunks touch the hull and adjust the bunks if need be.
Sounds like a good way to clean your hull
I noticed you have a garden hose flushing port on your outboard, with what looks to be a quick connector. I'd be very interested in what you did there. Does it have some sort of back-flow preventing valve? Maybe do a video on it. Thanks.
It was built into the engine, and it came with it.
So you are not moving the trailer as much as you are working on it in place, is that correct because I need to get boat up and put the whole roller assembly in place from front to back, trailer has none, as well I have to rebuild the running boards any suggestions?
This video might be helpful th-cam.com/video/XEArpfzbY58/w-d-xo.html
I would suggest a fitted cradle made out of wood. It would take a bit longer to build, but would provide more lateral stability. I don't like the idea of a V shaped hull on flat keel blocks. On the other hand we hoisted the Potomac and placed it on keel blocks after the Navy divers raised her when she sunk off of Treasure Island (FDR's "floating white house at the Port of Oakland). The wood keel blocks and wedges worked great but note that the vessel was restrained from tipping with engineered bracing placed at about 45 degree angle (my recollection).
That's good advice and something I gave some thought too as well. I had initially planned on shaping the wood blocks to do that but ended up relying on the two flat spots at the end of the innermost strakes to provide lateral stability. You can see it here at 5:13.
How do you get the trailer out..the axle will knock over the blocks
If you need to get the trailer out you would slide it out until the cross piece is close to the blocks, jack the front up and move the blocks behind the cross piece. Depending on the trailer, you may have to do this more than once.
Okay but how do you keep from hitting the blocks when you move the trailer out from underneath the boat won’t you hit the blocks because of the trailer shafts
Here's as separate link we did to a video showing how we swapped boat trailers.
th-cam.com/video/XEArpfzbY58/w-d-xo.html
How do pull you the trailer out . The front part we need figure a new way so we can work on both. But I like the back part blocking . Didn’t think about the center.
I left the trailer under it to do the rest of the work but you can always pull it forward until the cross member almost touches the front blocks, jack it up a bit and move the blocks behind it. Then repeat for each cross member.
A few large pieces of dock foam work great. Did you unbolt and raise or lower the trailer cross braces?
I'll keep that in mind. No I didn't need to in my case fortunately.
I learned something. Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
Great Video. Thanks !! I've been pondering the use of old but good inner tubes Four to six and air lift in addition to what you have going. Not sure they can handle the weight.
I'm a bit Leary of that method not sure you could rely on the tubes to hold the weight.
Super awesome
Thank you! Cheers!
Great idea, I'll have to do that with mine!
Have fun!
The boat is off the trailer, but do you get the trailer away from there? Still in the way if your gonna paint the bottom,or??
For what we needed to do this was all that was needed.
I didn't like my trailer so I took the whole rig to Ameritrail and they built me a brand new custom welded aluminum trailer to fit the boat , works great
Nice!
Just put the boat in the water by a dock or anchor, marina etc. Much easier than putting it on land. That is doing things the hard way. You could even rent a 2nd trailer for it.
great i dea, i like the fact you didnt have to nail all the wood together just to use only for a short while...i'll do the same thankyou for the vid...from new zealand
Thank you! Cheers!
Good job! 👍
Thank you! Cheers!
Thanks for sharing this method.
No problem thanks for watching!
Nice fenders
Thanks!
NOT IDEAL is an understatement 😮
It is, that is why I don't recommend anyone do it this way. However, if you have to re -do the bottom paint, there's not a lot of other options without heavy equipment. I will say that I took all the necessary precautions and never took it off the trailer, just lifted it enough to redo the bottom paint.
Awesome! Cheers 😊
Thank you! Cheers!
Now how do you pull the trailer out?
A few feet at a time and moving the trailer frame through the blocks by repl;acing them as the trailer goes forward.
How much u have to pay yo put a boat on the water by crane in marina in NC?
Probably a decent amount but entirely sure.
Why mess with the pavers? Just jack up the axle on one side. If you want to make it perfectly level measure the distance needed to raise the axle then jack it up that high. If you want blocks under the tire you can add them after you jack it up. BTW, a set of ramps are handy to have around.
That would be another way to do it, thanks
How do you get the trailer out?
he's not removing the trailer, just moving the boat back a little. (maybe 6-12 inches?)
Correct I did not need to remove the trailer for what i was doing just wanted to set the boat back 6 inches.
That's why I was watching.you need to leave a bit of room so you can pull the trailer forward, then jack up the front again, and keep moving the trailer as you disassemble and reassemble two sets of cribbing.
Correct if I needed to remove the trailer I would of used the method you described.
I tied mine to a tree and slowly pulled the trailer from under it. MY trailer looks like yours but no bunks has rollers just used blocks and it sat on blocks
Needed trailer to pick up another boat
That's another idea for the future thank you for your suggestions!
Bring in a boom truck with some long straps strap it lifted and pull the trailer up for moderate now you’re working like a smart man
Unfortunately I didn't have the option to do that.
Why not just jack up the trailer then place your supports then lower the trailer?
That's one way to do it, thanks for the input I'll keep that in mind for future projects.
Hey Jose! When are we going fishing?
Depends if you want to go fishing or "catching", good on the former, not great on the latter lol
thx good start now how do i get my trailer //// out
I left the trailer under it to do the rest of the work but you can always pull it forward until the cross member almost touches the front blocks, jack it up a bit and move the blocks behind it. Then repeat for each cross member.
I'll tell you a much easier way. I'd get someone else to do it 😂. It was during the off season the last time I had to swap bunks on a pontoon trailer. We launched it , tied it up. I brought a Genset with a full set of tools, vynal fence post already covering the bunks. Just had to cut to fit , and install. The ranger stopped by , n drank coffee with us while we worked. He loved the ingenuity. Tho the next ranger could have written us a ticket. Just luck of the draw , I wrecken.
The local lake wouldn't allow it so had to do it this way.
I used a big tree to lift off the front so I could get the trailer completely out from under mine
Good insight, thank you!
Awesome video bro thanks 👍
Your welcome, thanks for watching!
Nice editing and videography. Audio within spec.
Thanks a ton
Wouldn't a lumber gantry be easier for the front? It could become a swing set for the grandkids when you're done.
I thought about that but didn't want to fall into the "project begets another project " trap lol
It would have freed up the trailer entirely. You would have had full access to the bottom of the boat as well without the trailer in the way.
I did this once, replaced the bunks on my trailer. I just put the boat in the water, so it wasn’t on the trailer.🤷🏼
That works too, unless your putting on bottom paint
Gonna have to put on bottom paint on mine too soon .. and re carpet the bunks... maybe replace the bunks entirely. I'm not sure yet.. I have an uneven ground surface I'm dealing with aswell. Little nervous to try this on my boat ... but I think it will work. It's a white water center console .. 17ft. . Big and wide for a 17ft
@@ExtremeDIYGuy wrong, you crawl under the trailer, remove the top layer of gel coats, apply your bottom paint everywhere but where the bunks are, and once the new bottom paint you put on has cured, you put the boat back on the trailer 1 foot off center, and then put the bottom paint on the areas where the bunks were. Just have to think a little bit.
You could have secured the rear of boat pull it far forward then block up the bow and pull the trailer all the way out but rear would need corners blocked up then paint bottom and redo trailer JT
Thanks for the insight!
Great video!
Thanks!
Thanks, darn good video
Your welcome!
Why not gather the materials for the build and take everything to a launch, launch the boat, tie it up, park the trailer and fix everything in the parking lot, then load the boat back on?
That wasn't an option at the time this was filmed but your feedback is appreciated.
Do you use a lot of duct tape too? You over engineered your “cribs” with way too much wood instead of building a frame stand that would be more stable, require less wood, provide more height, and allow simpler adjustment to uneven ground. Just completed the same process with only two 10”X2”X10’ and one 2”x4”x8’ to build the cradle.
Good for you!
Take the boat to the lake, replace the bunks, load the boat, Done. MUCH safer. Just have the bunks precut and ready
That wasn't an option that was available to us at that time but I will keep that in mind for future projects thanks for your input!
Toe -Screw all those crib blocks together and put the boat weight more to the center rather tha the edge---Mikey
Good advice, thank Mikey
A very good friend of mine was crushed to death a few weeks ago in Ohio working under his vehicle when a jack stand failed. Boats, in this manner, won't have any mercy, either, should "something" go amiss. BE VERY CAREFUL, y'all.
1:58 Pirate Cat aboard...be careful. 🏴☠️
😂 she's a boat cat believe it or not.
hey........... thank you !
Your welcome!
just blocks it up then let the air out of the tires, nothing else needed!
That's genius I'll have to remember that.
Why not use sandbags instead of bricks could damage your boat haul 😅and not to mention the Paint Job and gravity is not kind to the boats bottom
We didn't use bricks to lift the boat off the trailer, we used wood blocks.
Nice
Thanks 👍
Why didn't you just use a ramp?
Do you mean like a ramp at a lake or ocean?
@@ExtremeDIYGuy He probably meant the metal ramp for lifting cars, like Pittsburgh ramp set and such. They don't come with variable height, so your method is valid, I think.
I would just put the boat in the water to allow me to work on the trailer. Much easier and safer.
Unfortunately I did not have that option.
You might want to take the straps off the rear
They were removed, didn't show it in the video.
Another reason I won’t get a bunk trailer. Ya can’t go wrong with rollers.
Bunk trailers can be useful depending on the hull you have for a particular boat.
Trying to do this with my lobster boat
Good luck!
What a hassel that is. I have got plenty of boats off the trailer just lift the front of the trailer up & let the boat slide back (onto lawn not driveway) let it go back slowly on winch & use car to pull the trailer out from under the boat with a piece of rope tied to safety chain (don't have rope too short else when it gets to the end of the boat the trailer will come forward & hit your car. a second person can slowly let out the winch rope if you are scared it will come off too fast. to get boat back on just winch it back. I have done boats up to 24 feet long like this.
So..... how do you prep and paint the hull with it sitting on your lawn? I’m just curious.
@@mikereimer5419 I am usually getting it off to do something to the trailer, but when I paint under I use my forklift to tip the boat on its side then I can paint standing up. I guess you could still put it on four bales of hay as you got it off the trailer if you want it up a bit. Sometimes if the trailer rollers are rusty I tie the stern of the boat to a tree before towing the trailer from under.
I opted to do it this way due to the fact it was easier for me to paint the underside and do the work on the trailer. But thank you for your feedback.
I would have just found a place to put my boat in the water. Way less work IMO.
This wasn't an option at the time unfortunately, and how would bottom paint the boat in the water?
@@ExtremeDIYGuy yeah that would be an issue. 😂
I built a gantry.....just because
I wanted to build one but don have the space
Hey good idea not a lot of effort there.
Thanks!
im disappointed, was hoping to see the trailer get pulled out and go back under.
Didn't need to do that as I could get to everything I needed to do with the trailer in place.
ha..1/2 the job..lets see you pull the tralier out. It took me 4 recribs
Luckily for what we were doing we didn't have to remove the trailer.