| Boat coverings.... use em? #47721 04/18/05 06:52 AM 04/18/05 06:52 AM |
Joined: Mar 2005 Posts: 2,074 Northfield,NH USA bullswan OP
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Posts: 2,074 Northfield,NH USA | I will be trailering my new (to me) Nacra 5.5sl a loooooong way. I can't seem to find anywhere in the past postings a conversation about whether or not people cover their boats when trailering to protect it from road debris and grime. In the AWESOME in-house, on-line, store (thanks Jake for pointing out from time to time that we have such great resource and I thing it would be great if we could all support one of our own )all I see are covers that are not suitable for trailering. So what does everyone do? Since mine is a one-time thing I thought about wrapping the pontoons in bubble wrap and a tarp and ducktaping (quack) the hell out of it. Or covering it in cardboard but I figure that would disintegrate in a good rainstorm. I've seen sheet of plastic cardboard but I have no idea where to find it. Thoughts?
Thanks everyone! Greg
Greg
The nice part about being a pessimist is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised. - George Will "It's not that liberals aren't smart, it's just that so much of what they know isn't so" -Ronald Reagan | | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: bvining]
#47723 04/18/05 08:40 AM 04/18/05 08:40 AM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | You could get a roll of shrinkwrap. Take off the tramp and wrap the shrinkwrap around each hull all the way from front to back.
P.S. I'm not talking about bubblewrap; shrinkwrap is a smooth plastic.
P.P.S. Actually, it would be better to wrap it from back to front, so the overlaps are facing away from the wind.
Last edited by Mary; 04/18/05 08:59 AM.
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[Re: Robi]
#47725 04/18/05 01:06 PM 04/18/05 01:06 PM |
Joined: Mar 2005 Posts: 2,074 Northfield,NH USA bullswan OP
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Posts: 2,074 Northfield,NH USA | Robi, Awesome idea! I was at Home Depot this morning and looked right at it but it didn't *click*. It would stand up to the wind pressure huh? I think I'll go back and look at it now. Thanks for the idea! Greg
The nice part about being a pessimist is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised. - George Will "It's not that liberals aren't smart, it's just that so much of what they know isn't so" -Ronald Reagan | | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: bullswan]
#47726 04/18/05 01:31 PM 04/18/05 01:31 PM |
Joined: May 2002 Posts: 217 jcasto1
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Posts: 217 | When I bought my new 5.5uni, I also bought a set of hull covers, which are suitable for trailering. They were expensive, but have preserved my 10-year old boat extremely well, after many seasons of trailering, and several off-seasons in full blaring Texas sun. Salty Dog Marine sells them (sorry, Rick).
Jim Casto NACRA 5.5 & NACRA 5.7 Austin TX Lake Travis
| | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: jcasto1]
#47727 04/18/05 01:52 PM 04/18/05 01:52 PM |
Joined: Nov 2002 Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... Mary
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Posts: 5,558 Key Largo, FL & Put-in-Bay, OH... | Being a woman, I'm very ambivalent about boat covers. Sounds like a good idea to cover your boat for trailering, but then all the road crud gets all over the cover instead of the boat. And then how do you wash the boat cover? It certainly is not going to fit into my washing machine. And that crud on it is probably not going to come off even in a commercial machine if I take it to a laundromat. And if you keep your cover on your boat under trees, where we are, the cover is going to get covered with tree droppings and mildew. Again, how are you going to wash that cover? Just seems to me (again, as the woman who is going to have to figure out how to wash the cover) that it is much easier to wash the crud off the boat than to wash the cover. (Unless you don't care whether you have a really ugly, dirty, greasy, oily cover on your boat as long as the boat itself is pristine. In other words, a boat cover is just one more thing to wash.  Personally, I like the earlier idea of just slathering or spraying the boat with something that will keep the road stuff from sticking, so it's easy to wash at the other end of your trip. | | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: Mary]
#47728 04/18/05 02:04 PM 04/18/05 02:04 PM |
Joined: Feb 2004 Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... scooby_simon Hull Flying, Snow Sliding.... |
Hull Flying, Snow Sliding....
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Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... | I would never travel a boat with a cover on - A few grains of sand inside will act as cutting paste over a trip and WILL wear the finish on the boat. Don't do it.
F16 - GBR 553 - SOLD I also talk sport here | | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: scooby_simon]
#47730 04/18/05 03:07 PM 04/18/05 03:07 PM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA David Ingram
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Posts: 3,906 Clermont, FL, USA | I have/had a travel cover for every boat I have owned. Yes sand is an issue. I have a spray bottle that I used to wash the sand off. I travel quite a bit, and I use a cover, it's a good thing.
Dave
David Ingram F18 USA 242 http://www.solarwind.solar"Do or do not. There is no try." - Yoda "Excuses are the tools of the weak and incompetent" - Two sista's I overheard in the hall "You don't have to be a brain surgeon to be a complete idiot, but it helps"
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[Re: Mary]
#47731 04/18/05 03:13 PM 04/18/05 03:13 PM |
Joined: Feb 2004 Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... scooby_simon Hull Flying, Snow Sliding.... |
Hull Flying, Snow Sliding....
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Posts: 3,528 Looking for a Job, I got credi... | I'm really getting personally interested in this now. We often trailer our boats behind a rear-diesel motorhome that gets our hulls all covered with black stuff from the fumes.
Will spraying the hulls with Sailcote make it possible to easily wash the black stuff off? And what does "easily wash off" mean? Just rinsing with a hose, or doing some scrubbing? Or putting the boat in the water and just sponging it off? Or what? I've had stories told of people using a flexable (flameproof) connector and then running exaust pipe(s) down the length of the trailer when towing with Diesel motorhomes to get around this problem.
F16 - GBR 553 - SOLD I also talk sport here | | | Re: Boat coverings.... use em?
[Re: EasyReiter]
#47736 04/22/05 03:53 PM 04/22/05 03:53 PM |
Joined: Dec 2001 Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL waterbug_wpb
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Posts: 5,590 Naples, FL | Maybe I'm old fashioned, but we just put on liquid dish soap (no water) and let it dry on the hull(s). Then, when we arrived at the site, we washed the boat (or just dropped it in the water). The grime (even behind an F-250 diesel back in the day when you could follow the smoke trail to find 'em) washed right off.
Oh yeah, that works great with camping cookware when you're using a wood stove (on the exterior only). Keeps them from getting black.
If you are just going to drop the boat in the water rather than wash it, I would humbly suggest NOT soaping up the deck (makes for some tricky sailing when a soaped up deck gets wet!)
Jay
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