Model Boat Mayhem

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Author Topic: how do you move big boats.  (Read 13713 times)

Colin Bishop

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #50 on: October 13, 2008, 04:57:01 pm »

Gosh Bryan, I always wondered where you lived!
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Bryan Young

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #51 on: October 13, 2008, 08:13:37 pm »

Gosh Bryan, I always wondered where you lived!
Sorry, you have lost me there. Or do you think I live in the trailer? SWMBO has for years threatened to install a bunk bed, toilet bucket and a primitive shower into my "work space". I respond by tramping bits of swarf over "her" carpets and generally making a nuisance of myself. She has responded by stowing her "new" potatoes in a cupboard (in the workshop)that I had earmarked for something else. But I shall prevail! I will never fogive or forget the day when she "dropped" a garden spade on to the foredeck of the incomplete "Norseman". But I love her all the same. (And she is a great cook). Bryan.
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Notes from a simple seaman

Bryan Young

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #52 on: October 19, 2008, 08:04:06 pm »

As you will see later (Colin) I do have enough room for a sleeping bag if it is required...
Pics 2365 and 2366 just show the trailer with its roof off.
The hood bearers and support struts are left in place.
The hood supports are simple aluminium tubing and the hood bearers are shaped timber (teak in this case). Both the tubes and the bearers have been "notched" to accept each other. The various little studs sticking out of the sides etc. are the male parts of the "press-the-dot" fasteners as used on car hoods. The windscreen is a fairly simple structure using "Glodex" (a secondary double-glazing material that is not much more than 1/16" thick) with an aluminium angle surround. This is removable to allow the trailer to fold "flattish". The long sides fold inwards, followed by the 2 ends.
2369 and 2370 are a bit different from the above. That is the 6' long "Baroda" sitting in its cradle. But we are talking about the trailer.
I put the 2 long lengths of timber along the sides just as stiffeners for the ply. The ally hood bearer supports hinge at the base and when in use clip into large "Terry Clips".  The timber hood bearers (when not in use) clip into simlar clips at the rear end of the trailer.
The entire interior was given a good coating of coloured varnish that has stood the test of time and weather (and muck). All the timber edges have aluminium edging.
The tailgate is different. It is of 2 thicknesses of ply with the insides grooved to ecapsulate the wiring. It also makes for a very substantial platform.
The ally strips are really only there because I liked the aesthetic value...but they have also protected the timber from gouges and what not.
"Baroda" is sitting in its cradle, which is in turn fastened to the trailer. The cradle is "cushioned" from the trailer and the model is further cushioned by lengths of pipe lagging foam tube. Other mountings can be seen on the "vacant" side....theses are for a larger model.
Pic 2368
This shows various things.
1....A pair of simple bolts locking 2 sides together.
2....The arrangement of the hood struts and bearers.
3....One of the (many) hinges that allow the thing to fold.
4....The chain and protective cover that allows the tailgate to sit flat.
I hope that this has answered your queries, and possibly enthused you enough to build your own. I had a lot of fun building this thing and learned a lot by doing it. It was all a lot cheaper than buying one "off the peg", and it does exactly what was originally intended.
Cheers. BY.
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Notes from a simple seaman

2HogsAL

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #53 on: October 27, 2008, 10:33:10 am »

Hi all

I don't know why I didn't think of it before but, I found this while searching for handy items.  I am planning on getting a small boat for fishing but don't have a drive to store it, so it would have to go in the back garden.  This means a trailer would be very awkward to navigate through the alley to my back gate.

It's an inflatable roof rack with a load capacity of 80kg!  And it only costs £50

http://www.force4.co.uk/ProductDetails/mcs/productID/1823/groupID/6/categoryID/52/v/0af7beb3-007c-47c2-b585-445d6967da88

The link should take you straight to it.  I have no interest in this company.  I haven't even been in contact with them.  I just thought that this may save a lot of messing around with trailers and removing of seating to make room for a larger model.

I have seen them on other sites so I would think they should be widely available through chandlers.

Regards Al
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BarryM

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #54 on: October 27, 2008, 11:21:07 am »

How do you move big boats? Try this - or is it overkill?  %)

http://www.maidoftheloch.com/html/slipway1.html
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Colin H

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Re: how do you move big boats.
« Reply #55 on: October 27, 2008, 04:02:12 pm »

Ooh I like that one more place to visit.

Thanks Barry

Colin H.
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