Stonehauler
Cadet
- Joined
- Aug 24, 2021
- Messages
- 8
This is a bit of an open ended question, but hoping to find some loose guidance and direction.
My wife and I own a 19ft ~4000 lbs boat. I tow it with my 2007 Lincoln Navigator without issue and I'm comfortable with it.
We're looking at selling our boat and we have our eyes on something larger. We're thinking in the 25-28 ft range. One we almost bought came in around 8000lbs with the trailer - twice what we're used to towing, plus much longer as well.
From what I gather, to start, I'd need a better truck to tow something like this because it is beyond my trucks towing capability.
Aside from a bigger truck, how reasonable is it to tow a boat like this to and from a lake or the river on a somewhat regular basis? We live 30 minutes away from both. I want to make sure I'm not getting myself in a situation where the boat is so large that it is unreasonable to not have it in a slip on the water.
During the summer, we find ourselves boating 2 - 3 times a month which would mean 2 - 3 times of towing it back and forth. Again, I have no issue with doing this with our 19ft boat.
Thoughts?
I own a 24' boat (26 with swim platform) and while it's not as big as the one you are looking at, it's certainly bigger than your first one.This is a bit of an open ended question, but hoping to find some loose guidance and direction.
My wife and I own a 19ft ~4000 lbs boat. I tow it with my 2007 Lincoln Navigator without issue and I'm comfortable with it.
We're looking at selling our boat and we have our eyes on something larger. We're thinking in the 25-28 ft range. One we almost bought came in around 8000lbs with the trailer - twice what we're used to towing, plus much longer as well.
From what I gather, to start, I'd need a better truck to tow something like this because it is beyond my trucks towing capability.
Aside from a bigger truck, how reasonable is it to tow a boat like this to and from a lake or the river on a somewhat regular basis? We live 30 minutes away from both. I want to make sure I'm not getting myself in a situation where the boat is so large that it is unreasonable to not have it in a slip on the water.
During the summer, we find ourselves boating 2 - 3 times a month which would mean 2 - 3 times of towing it back and forth. Again, I have no issue with doing this with our 19ft boat.
Thoughts?
YES, you need a bigger truck. I would suggest an F350 or equivalent in Dodge or GM. I find that 4WD is extremely useful at the ramp, so think about that as well. A wet slick ramp can be a bad thing when hauling your boat out. Consider getting a diesel powered one as well if you like fuel economy.
You are hauling it 30 minutes each way, so while a dually is not necessarily required, you might want to consider it. You already have a pretty wide trailer, so having the extra wheels on the back isn't going to be an issue when you are towing, but it's horrible at the local mall.
However, if you go SRW, or F250 or equivalent (3/4 ton), make sure to check your ratings. It's not just the weight of what you are towing, but everything else as well. How much tongue weight? If properly balanced, that's probably 800 lbs. If your vehicles GVWR only has 500 lbs of extra when fully loaded but before the trailer (suitcases in the back, family of large adults in the seats, cap, etc), you will be overweight. I know, because I ran those numbers and found I am 8800 lbs empty with no fuel. Add in all the stuff we want to haul and we are just over 10k on the truck tires. (400 or so in people, 100 in dogs, 200 in goodies, 160 lbs of fuel, and 700 lbs of trailer tongue weight
I just got back from a longer haul (1600 miles or so) and I really wish I had bought the dually. Yes, the SRW is a heck of a lot easier to use around town, and it allowed for a short 6.5 ft bed, but a blowout on the rear wheels when pulling the trailer would not have been fun.
If you are going up and down lots of hills, make sure your vehicle has the torque to do so. I had a Yukon for my tow vehicle prior to my current F350. Trust me, going up and down hills is a LOT easier in my diesel than my gas Yukon. If you are on mostly flat roads though, you are okay.
Make sure the trailer is big enough for the boat and it allows you to get the boat into the water with ease. Nothing worse than putting too small a trailer under your boat. Spending money on a good trailer makes recovering a bigger boat much easier. Make sure you get brakes on all axles, and I HIGHLY recommend electric over hydraulic setups for larger boat trailers. I use one and will never go back to surge brakes.
Last thing to think about, is your local ramp/lake big enough for that boat? A boat that big needs a bigger/better ramp than one you can put a 19' boat in on. You also need to be sure your lake is need enough for your boat. If your local ramp is already iffy, you might want to reconsider.
Do your homework and take a hard look at the numbers. If you don't know the numbers, get someone to help you that does. If you ever get in an accident, your insurance company...and the insurance company of the person that you hit/hit you...will want to know if you were exceeding your limits. If you get pulled over, some cops will want to know your weights (so take it to a scale and keep the numbers) Finally, bigger trucks have bigger brakes. Nothing worse than finding your brake line failed due to vibration halfway though an 800 mile haul. Been there, done the laundry from that. It would have been a lot worse if it had failed 200 miles earlier when I was in the mountains.
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