OCMD
Jetboaters Admiral
- Messages
- 977
- Reaction score
- 1,004
- Points
- 267
- Location
- Ocean City MD
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2008
- Boat Model
- SX
- Boat Length
- 23
I found a place to store my 230, indoors. Very happy. It is a marina away from the water, and the owner bought a few adjoining properties. One of which used to be a Potato Chip factory. The place where they stored 1000s of potatos was partially underground, and this is the new boat storage place. I inspected it. Nice and warm, underground, and sealed from the elements so there will be no animals crapping in my boat. The photo is my boat on rollers before it gets loaded into a slot. At 90 bucks a month and 12 miles form my house? A no brainer.
Now, unfortunately, I have a perfectly good trailer to screw with. I drove the trailer home and noticed how loose the bow stop is when it does not have the weight of the boat pressing on it. The bunk boards look in pretty decent shape, with a bit of carpet wear. The roller strap (is this a word?) is old and looks like a replacement wouldn't hurt.
I don't need UBB's as my boat loads so easily on the carpet, and I never had an issue with this. With the UBB comments going both ways, I decided against this. My main question? What nice things can I treat my trailer to, since I now have it boat free for about five months. Should I have the bow stop welded? Would a weld actually be stronger than the current bolt set up? I'd hate to have a weld fail. The marina said they have a welder come by on occasion so I suppose they could do this. Does it require a special skill? What are the benefits of a welded bow stop? Or am i wasting my money. Thanks!
Now, unfortunately, I have a perfectly good trailer to screw with. I drove the trailer home and noticed how loose the bow stop is when it does not have the weight of the boat pressing on it. The bunk boards look in pretty decent shape, with a bit of carpet wear. The roller strap (is this a word?) is old and looks like a replacement wouldn't hurt.
I don't need UBB's as my boat loads so easily on the carpet, and I never had an issue with this. With the UBB comments going both ways, I decided against this. My main question? What nice things can I treat my trailer to, since I now have it boat free for about five months. Should I have the bow stop welded? Would a weld actually be stronger than the current bolt set up? I'd hate to have a weld fail. The marina said they have a welder come by on occasion so I suppose they could do this. Does it require a special skill? What are the benefits of a welded bow stop? Or am i wasting my money. Thanks!