Showing posts with label Eddie English Boat Trailer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Eddie English Boat Trailer. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Small Boat Double Stack Trailer

25 Feb 20:

We have identified that our Armada needs another double stack trailer, to carry a combination of Sunfish and kayaks, or Sunfish x 2, or the Penobscot 14 with a canoe, or the Sailfish...you get the idea. Back in 2013 Eddie English Boat Trailer in Milton Florida set us up by adding 2 pairs of steel trailer guides and aluminum crossbars to a MagicTilt double jetski trailer.


We padded the crossbars with large pool noodles and set off on a 2,348 mile road trip from NW Florida to the Niagara Sailing Club in Grand Island, NY to gather our wooden 1953 Alcort Sunfish ZIP and the 1977 AMF Sunfish NEPTUNE. The trailer rode great both with and without a load of boats.


The trailer also made a 1,234 mile round robin trip to Marshville, NC to pick up our 1963 Alcort Sunfish CHIP, with stops on the way back to pick up our wooden 1950s Alcort Super Sailfish ZSA ZSA and a 1963 Alcort Super Sailfish MKII SWEETNESS.

ZSA ZSA top rack and CHIP on bottom.


SWEETNESS was suspended on cargo straps below the top rack.


We sold the Magic Tilt trailer a while back with CIEL and put the guides on WILLOW's trailer, but WILLOW wants her trailer back for a road trip. Eddie is going to set us up again with one of his galvanized trailers specifically designed for Sunfish, he has made a lot of them for our local Sunfish dealer Key Sailing. He will also add the upper rack. The trailer comes complete with a bow stop, winch, fenders, bunks, 12 inch tires and LED lights. MADISON will be the Sunfish nominated for fit testing.


FMI: Eddie English Inc Boat Trailer

Wednesday, January 15, 2020

Spring Trailer Maintenance

15 Jan 20:

So if your trailer bits are rusty, take a closer look. Many times the rust starts on the inside of a box frame/axle and there is a lot more degradation on the inside of the frame compared to what we see on the outside, Especially concerning is corrosion around any welds. Eddie has plenty of new axles and frames, he orders ahead this time of year. Also time to check those tires before the Spring road trips, they had a tire today that had a huge bulge on the sidewall from where the plies are separating, internal failure. The tire was made December of 2013, so when they recommend to replace trailer tires no later than 6 years it is good advice from the pros to heed. The tire has a WWYY (Week/Year) manufacture code on at least one sidewall, that tire was 4913. I also got to meet the new boss today, Roscoe. Many thanks to Rhett and Eddie at Eddie English Boat Trailer for the tips.

Might be time to consider a new axle, these are going to the recycle bin.


Rust on the outside usually means even more rust on the inside. Cost of a new axle is way less than a tow, boat damage, etc...


Time to go...to the junkyard.


Boat trailer bling.


This is why 6 years is the MAX we'd put on a tire, per the pro's recommendation, plies are separating.



Tire made 49th week of 2013, WWYY WeekYear code. Externally the tire looks okay, but problems lurk inside.


Stocking up for Spring business.


The new boss Roscoe.


Tuesday, May 21, 2019

Check Those Lug Nuts

21 May 19:

So we have been bugging everyone to check tires and bearings on their trailers, now it is time to remind folks to grab the lug wrench and check those lug nuts. We almost lost a wheel off of the Drascombe Lugger trailer in Yuma, I had snugged the lug nuts after some maintenance, then forgot to do the final tightening after the tire was back on the ground. On the way back from a grand sailing adventure on Senator's Wash Reservoir I felt a wobble, pulled over and saw the wheel looking strange. The lug nuts had worked loose and the wheel had gouged the threads on the lug studs almost halfway through, one lug nut was gone. I was able to tighten the other three and limp home, then had to replace the lug studs. Can you imagine the trouble I'd have been in if I chipped the Skipper's ONKAHYE? We might have had to call SAR after Skipper beat me. Speaking of SAR (Search and Rescue) that's why we were out in Yuma, I was flying with the SAR unit at MCAS Yuma, one of the finest units in the World. We flew the mighty HH-1N Huey and were geared up for Day/Night technical rescue, we could deploy our Corpsman in almost any terrain and retrieve the Corpsman and patient with the hoist or long line.


We got a good tip from windsurfing pro Tom Pace, he has driven all around the world with gear tied to trailers and to the tops of vehicles. He has a 1-10-100 Rule, pull over after a mile and check tie downs, tires, bearings, latch, chains, lights, etc... and then recheck after 10 miles and 100 miles. After 100 miles he says he had never had an issue, most opportunities to excel appeared in the first 100 miles.


Capn Jack's modus operandi was to leave the window of the car rolled down for the first few blocks and listen to the bearings. Squeaky squealy noises mean turn around and head back to the hangar for some maintenance.


Our trick was to take our grease gun, wrap it in an old towel and bungee it to the bow stop on the trailer. ONKAHYE's trailer had a nice U shaped beam for the bow stop that the towel and gun nestled into. Each pit stop for fuel and snacks we do a walkaround, kind of a post flight and preflight, check straps and lights, and put our hand down near the hubs and sidewalls to check for a bearing failing and heating up. We'd also check to see if the bearing buddies had sucked in any grease, pump in a few squirts as needed. Not a surprise, but when we had all the gear for Preventative Maintenance (PM) and some spare parts, it seems like we never needed it.



Double stack using two sets of steel trailer guide posts and cross beams. I used a field expedient method of 2x4 bunks and lines to make cross beams that day, we have also used square aluminum tubing cut to length.




POSI-LUBE spindle and hub.



Trailer Park. ONKAHYE has a custom trailer built by Eddied English Boat Trailer in Milton, FL, drop beam and drop axle so she can launch in skinny water. Galvanized to take on the salt water. POSI-Lube spindles for best bearing lubrication and cooling performance. She'll take to the highway just fine with 13 inch radials. WILLOW's trailer is to the left, it has bunks set up to provide the best support for our lapstrake runabout WILLOW's keel and stringers.


WILLOW's trailer repurposed into a lumber hauler.

Hiding off to the right is ONKAHYE's previous trailer, it is used for our Day Sailer II CYANE now, been in the family for many years, with a few new parts added by Eddie along the way...let's see, the coupler, tongue, bow stop, winch, axle, hubs, tires, springs, bunks...aka "My Grandfather's Axe."