| Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: gbsc_59]
#58054 09/27/05 07:31 AM 09/27/05 07:31 AM |
Joined: Jul 2005 Posts: 306 St. Louis, MO hobienick
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 306 St. Louis, MO | I have the same problem where I sail. My boat weighs in at nearly 400 lbs. On a slight incline I can move it around on my own with the beach wheels. But on this beach it takes tow of us an enormous amount of effort ot get it up to the trailer.
I launch at a public beach so I can't install anything to make my life easier.
I was thinking that putting a winch on a post past the top of the grade would be a big help. All you would need to do is have one person keep the boat balanced onthe beach wheels and one person run the winch. If you wanted to sail solo you could use 2 sets of wheels.
This seems to me to be the most robust and the least expensive option for solo launching.
Nick
Current Boat Looking for one
Previous Boats '84 H16 '82 H18 Magnum '74 Pearson 30 St. Louis, MO
| | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: gbsc_59]
#58055 09/27/05 08:15 AM 09/27/05 08:15 AM | Anonymous
Unregistered
| Anonymous
Unregistered | A co-worker of mine said that in buffalo where his in-laws sail they use a small tractor to haul the boats to the water. I would guess they just drag the trailers to the water. Somebody on this list probably sails at that beach.
You could probably find an old riding lawn mower with 15HP cheap.
I know it is tuff even with the slight grade on our beach. My prindle 18 is only 300 lbs and I can move it easily on my own, but the guys with the Hobie 18s… I always run over to help push. That extra 100 lbs makes such a big difference.
Matt | | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: gbsc_59]
#58058 09/27/05 09:59 AM 09/27/05 09:59 AM |
Joined: Jan 2003 Posts: 223 Western New York wyatt
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 223 Western New York | Hi: I'm from the Buffalo Fleet ( www.wnycatamaran.com), and yes, we do use a tractor to move our trailers down to the beach, then slide the boats off the trailers and into the water. If the surf is not bad, we put them on a mooring pin while we put the trailer on the beach. Usually a single person can launch or put his boat back on a trailer without problems. Most of us have winches on the trailer so we back the trailer partially in the water, then put the bows on, then winch it up the rest of the way. But, you may want to contact someone from CRAM. About six years ago we participated in an "Around the Bay" Regatta around Toledo OH, where they had to drop boats into the water from a very steep incline. They built a ten by ten platform with a rug on it that they slid the boats onto. The platform ran on top of two rails (looked like highway fencing or crash guards). At the top of the platform was a smaller briggs and stratton engine with a large winch drum. The platform had a bridle connecting a line that they could put 2-3 wraps on the winch, and by tightening the pressure on the line, the platform could be "powered up". They used the same winch to gently ease the platform down. This was sort of a permanent set-up; seemed to work well. Wyatt | | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: Brian_Mc]
#58063 09/27/05 08:34 PM 09/27/05 08:34 PM |
Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 31 Richmond, VA Rich
newbie
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newbie
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 31 Richmond, VA | Not sure of the mechanics yet, but how about a slight modification to a garage door opener?
I can stall the sails with the best of 'em!
| | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: CharlesLeblanc]
#58065 09/28/05 12:11 AM 09/28/05 12:11 AM |
Joined: Feb 2004 Posts: 1,012 South Australia Darryl_Barrett
old hand
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old hand
Joined: Feb 2004
Posts: 1,012 South Australia | Every yacht club in South Australia, (and all racing is conducted from yacht clubs), owns more than one tractor which tow the boats (sailing and rescue) onto and off of the beach, the boats (both mono and multi hulled) are usually rigged on the trailers (or transferd from the trailer onto beach rollers once on the beach) then positioned at the waters edge and launched from the trailers (or rollers) immediately before “heading off”. The trailers are left a little way up the beach ready for receiving the boats after racing. A few people use the same system but instead of the tractors, use their own 4WD’s. There are some of the mono hulls that rig their boat’s on the lawns in front of the club houses on wheeled “dolly’s”, but they still often use the tractors to pull the boat and the doley down to the waters edge and back up afterwards. All in all a very “civilised” way of operating (not to mention “easy on the back”). Boats are never “moored” here, the boats are taken home after racing on their trailers or can be stored in “lock up” storage, in a yard or at some clubs, under cover. We have a saying here that the only mooring that lets you sleep soundly at night is the one that your boat sits on in your garage at home. (all the clubs are situated at public beaches as well) | | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: Darryl_Barrett]
#58066 09/28/05 04:30 PM 09/28/05 04:30 PM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL Sycho15
addict
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addict
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL | Do a search for "Dune Dog". I posted something like this in a similar thread a while ago.
G-Cat 5.7M #583 (sail # currently 100) in Bradenton, FL
Hobie 14T
| | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: hobienick]
#58068 09/28/05 10:28 PM 09/28/05 10:28 PM |
Joined: Jul 2004 Posts: 24 Milwaukee, WI OldSalt
stranger
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stranger
Joined: Jul 2004
Posts: 24 Milwaukee, WI | Evening Folks:
Having spent most of the last two summers rehabbing a pair of Hobies, my winter project is to see if I can make an electric cart to either move the boat and trailer or the boat on beach wheels down the public beach and close to the water.
I have most of the parts, electric motor, controller, frame, wheels, batteries, posi-traction axel, bearings, etc. but I have to think/work through whether or not the current wheels I have (10-12" soft slicks) will be able to get traction (without slipping or just plain dogging down)?
Anybody have any first hand experience with using the smaller wheels on a somewhat packed beach? Alter all, most of the parts I have came from a golf cart manufacturing plant...and they designed the stuff so that it would take two fat old golfers, plus their bags and coolers....up and down a frequently wet and slippery lawn; I think it has some chance of actually working.
Regards,
Paul, Milwaukee, WI
Will keep you informed as the project gets underway. I am sure it will be slow....but hope it will be fun.
I would rather be sailing, than reading about sailing!
| | | Re: Powered Trolley for catamaran
[Re: OldSalt]
#58069 09/29/05 07:09 AM 09/29/05 07:09 AM |
Joined: Apr 2002 Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL Sycho15
addict
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addict
Joined: Apr 2002
Posts: 591 Bradenton, FL | From my 4-wheeling experience I would like to comment that tires with large tread blocks are more likely to DIG than grip in sand, especially soft sand. My bald old street tires worked far better in sugar sand than the brand new Mud-Terrains, and my buddies with Boggers would get stuck first each time. If you're using golf cart/atv tires, go with a street or "all-terrain" tread for use in sand.
G-Cat 5.7M #583 (sail # currently 100) in Bradenton, FL
Hobie 14T
| | | not a golf cart
[Re: Rich]
#58070 09/29/05 07:58 AM 09/29/05 07:58 AM |
Joined: Jan 2003 Posts: 223 Western New York wyatt
enthusiast
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enthusiast
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 223 Western New York | For those of you thinking about using a golf cart to move these beach trailers around, think about the weight you're trying to move: A hobie 16 is around 400 lbs and even a trailex trailer is another 400. Galavanized steel is about 50% heavier. Certainly, quite a load. In our area on Lake Erie, we have a few property owners that have the golf carts to get around their properties and run along the beach. The carts can function okay if they stay near the water's edge on the hard pack, but at least four times we've had to get our tractor to pull these things out of sugary sand. Another thing about tractors: Some work better than others. We had a Ford 8N for many years that worked well, but when we decided to upgrade to a newer machine from our 1948, we tried a John Deere full-sized tractor and it always bogged down in the sand. Last year we purchased a new Kubota diesel and it's four wheel drive option is perfect. We've developed easy going systems for just about everything. Our trailers are kept behind the sand dunes to keep them out of the heavier winds and we also dropped in a forty-foot storage container with multiple racks for storage boxes and clothes racks for hanging up all of our wetsuits and sailing wear. We just show up to the beach with a change of dry clothes and a cooler. Life is good in Angola, New York. www.wnycatamaran.org | | | Re: not a golf cart
[Re: steveh]
#58072 09/29/05 11:12 AM 09/29/05 11:12 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
Joined: Jun 2001
Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Beachcat tractor? I have a hard enough time keeping sand out of my traveler as it is.
Jake Kohl | | |
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