What thinketh the membership here..... Useful or just hype

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
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15,505
I've been looking at something like this for most of the winter. I really want one because I go solo boating most of the time with a 21ft center console which I am unable to reach the boweye from inside the boat and the launch I go to has no way for me to get to it other than over the bow and down the winch post which hurts sometimes when I fall
When I had a roller trailer, I had a piece of rope roughly 6' long with a slip knot tied on one end. Lassoed the winch post and tied off to the bow cleat to keep the boat from sliding back. Got off boat, connected the cable and winched to the post.

With the bunk, I can load shallow and stick the boat on the bunks or back the trailer in deeper and float the boat to the post using a line tied to the bow cleat
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
743
When I had a roller trailer, I had a piece of rope roughly 6' long with a slip knot tied on one end. Lassoed the winch post and tied off to the bow cleat to keep the boat from sliding back. Got off boat, connected the cable and winched to the post.

With the bunk, I can load shallow and stick the boat on the bunks or back the trailer in deeper and float the boat to the post using a line tied to the bow cleat
That is essentially how I have to do it. Sadly I have no good way of getting from the boat to the trailer/water short of going over the bow. The dock is far enough away at my primary ramp that a jump can be dangerous in either the dark or non sunny days.
 

airshot

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jul 22, 2008
Messages
4,336
That is essentially how I have to do it. Sadly I have no good way of getting from the boat to the trailer/water short of going over the bow. The dock is far enough away at my primary ramp that a jump can be dangerous in either the dark or non sunny days.
I do similar, but keep tight against the dock, drive on, snap the winch line onto the bow eye, step off onto the dock, walk back to vehicle and finish tightening winch strap then drive to parking lot. When I back the trailer in, I just keep the side guide about a foot to foot and a half away from the dock then I know I am plenty close enough.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
743
I do similar, but keep tight against the dock, drive on, snap the winch line onto the bow eye, step off onto the dock, walk back to vehicle and finish tightening winch strap then drive to parking lot. When I back the trailer in, I just keep the side guide about a foot to foot and a half away from the dock then I know I am plenty close enough.
My bow is probably 2-3ft from the land/side of the ramp and the stern is probably 4-5 ft from the dock. It was not designed to jump from the boat to the dock. It was done that way to handle the larger boats that go in and out there even though 90% are smaller ones.
 

airshot

Rear Admiral
Joined
Jul 22, 2008
Messages
4,336
My bow is probably 2-3ft from the land/side of the ramp and the stern is probably 4-5 ft from the dock. It was not designed to jump from the boat to the dock. It was done that way to handle the larger boats that go in and out there even though 90% are smaller ones.
Your backing in at an angle ? Move your stern closer so you can step out onto the dock.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
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Your backing in at an angle ? Move your stern closer so you can step out onto the dock.
Not backing at an angle the dock is about 2-3ft from the end of the ramp. If I put the stern closer to the dock it will require backing in on an angle and not enough room to do that on a busy weekend.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
15,505
Not backing at an angle the dock is about 2-3ft from the end of the ramp. If I put the stern closer to the dock it will require backing in on an angle and not enough room to do that on a busy weekend.
Im not following……the dock isn’t parallel to the ramp?

1712747638533.jpeg
 

jlh3rd

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jul 10, 2017
Messages
424
bunk trailer , 24' pontoon boat. I load and unload myself. I use the motor when loading , idle, to keep the boat on until I connect the winch. I've marked the trailer, yellow paint, to give me a reference for how deep to go.
It helps.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
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Mar 20, 2016
Messages
743
Im not following……the dock isn’t parallel to the ramp?

View attachment 396657
Nope more like | ramp |
| docks |

Hopefully that displays well I don't have an image of my ramp and everything on google shows the park not the ramp and maps view is too blurry to tell. Essentially you have a hell of a jump to the dock which is not wide enough to safely jump to.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
15,505
Nope more like | ramp |
| docks |

Hopefully that displays well I don't have an image of my ramp and everything on google shows the park not the ramp and maps view is too blurry to tell. Essentially you have a hell of a jump to the dock which is not wide enough to safely jump to.
Cant see the picture but sounds like your working with tapered finger pier
 

JASinIL2006

Vice Admiral
Joined
Feb 10, 2012
Messages
5,549
Cant see the picture but sounds like your working with tapered finger pier

I think what he means is that the ramp and the dock are parallel to one another, but the dock is offset about 3' from the edge of the ramp, meaning that even if he angled his boat to be right on the edge of the ramp, he's still 3' from the dock.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
15,505
I think what he means is that the ramp and the dock are parallel to one another, but the dock is offset about 3' from the edge of the ramp, meaning that even if he angled his boat to be right on the edge of the ramp, he's still 3' from the dock.
That makes no sense......how do passengers get in and out of the boat?
 

JASinIL2006

Vice Admiral
Joined
Feb 10, 2012
Messages
5,549
@SkaterRace said "It was done that way to handle the larger boats that go in and out there even though 90% are smaller ones." We really need him to return to answer, but it sounds like a poorly designed ramp/dock.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
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@SkaterRace said "It was done that way to handle the larger boats that go in and out there even though 90% are smaller ones." We really need him to return to answer, but it sounds like a poorly designed ramp/dock.
That was what a game warden told me one day when I asked him why it was so stupidly designed.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
743
That makes no sense......how do passengers get in and out of the boat?
You back the boat off the trailer and up to the dock before passengers get in or out of it. It is just a pain for loading/unloading.
 

SkaterRace

Senior Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 20, 2016
Messages
743
I think what he means is that the ramp and the dock are parallel to one another, but the dock is offset about 3' from the edge of the ramp, meaning that even if he angled his boat to be right on the edge of the ramp, he's still 3' from the dock.
That's exactly it
 
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