[Rhodes22-list] Trailer Trouble

jpd9668 jpd9668 at gmail.com
Sun Jul 23 07:38:09 EDT 2023


Peter,True, most ra.ps domt have water connections. Even hosing down at destination is advisable. Its certai ly not the end all but maintenance is so often ingnored. Just glad you weren't hurt. The double axel saved you!Best, JoeSent via the Samsung Galaxy S22 5G, an AT&T 5G smartphone
-------- Original message --------From: Peter Nyberg <peter at sunnybeeches.com> Date: 7/22/23  8:54 AM  (GMT-05:00) To: rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Trailer Trouble Joe,A fresh water wash-down after launch or retrieval certainly sounds like a good idea, but no boat ramp I've ever used had a faucet.  I should point out that all areas of the trailer that are galvanized seem to be holding up very well.  That includes most of the axles.  But, the axles have 3" or 4" 'drops' welded onto the ends, and these for some reason are not galvanized.  (The 'drops' actually go up rather than down.  They allow the trailer to sit lower, making the boat easier to launch and retrieve.)  Not surprisingly, it was one of the 'drops' that failed.Just last week, I had taken the boat off of the trailer and taken the trailer to my local shop to have a brake line replaced.  So, they did work very close to the point of failure, and didn't notice anything amiss. --Peter> On 2023-07-21, at 22:12:35 EDT, Joe Dempsey wrote:>> I hate to sound flippant, but it looks like the trailer never saw a fresh water > rinse. My trailers always spent more time getting hosed of, especially the > undercarriage, than they did in the water. Really pissed off the people in line > at the ramp. But my axel never rusted in two.Joe DempseyTrojan 42M/V > VoyagerFormer Rhodes 22S/V RespiteDeltaville, VASent via the Samsung Galaxy S22 > 5G, an AT&T 5G smartphone > 


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