For those who have no life and read this forum too often, you may recall my story. Bought a boat, then a trailer, then a truck to tow it. Finally, taught self to sail. Well, used truck=used hitch. Last weekend, towing her home, I hit the brakes just a touch harder than normal (I'm normally soft and careful on the brakes). Something about kids in the crosswalk convinced me. I heard a crunch/grind/boom as I came to a stop. Looking in the mirror, I saw my boat about 30 feet back, looking forlorn and abandoned. So, I jump out to see what the hey. The tongue was on the asphalt with this brown/red log over it. Then it dawned on me that it sort of resembled a trailer hitch cross-tube. Surveying my trucks back end, I saw naught but a gaping hole where my receiver hitch used to be. The boat had ripped it clean off. Luckily I was going maybe 2 MPH. No real harm done. (Most weeks, I'd be on the highway at 65 MPH.) In less than a minute, a man from across the road came over and we both decided that there was no way to safely get home. Now, as we talked, I could not help noticing that he had a J22 on a trailer and a buff looking F150 next to her. So I asked . . . "Any way you'd consider towing her home for us?" "How far?" "About three miles." Within 5 minutes, we were hooked and driving. Total down time, maybe 10 minutes. Lucky? I prefer "Blessed".
So, what's wrong with the idiot that's driving around with a cruddy hitch and a 5000 lb boat? I checked the hitch in the spring with a ball-peen hammer and it looked OK. I was wrong or corrosion accelerates.
Today, my Curt Class IV hitch arrives. 10,000 lb capacity, 1000 lb tongue weight. $20 extra for greater peace of mind. Tonight: 1 hour to cut the old bolts off. 5 minutes to drink a beer. 15 minutes to install new hitch. 10 minutes to bandage knuckles and irrigate rust from eyes. An hour and a half and that will be behind me.
So, word to the wise for you purists out there. Check your hitch well and don't end up on YouTube.
So, what's wrong with the idiot that's driving around with a cruddy hitch and a 5000 lb boat? I checked the hitch in the spring with a ball-peen hammer and it looked OK. I was wrong or corrosion accelerates.
Today, my Curt Class IV hitch arrives. 10,000 lb capacity, 1000 lb tongue weight. $20 extra for greater peace of mind. Tonight: 1 hour to cut the old bolts off. 5 minutes to drink a beer. 15 minutes to install new hitch. 10 minutes to bandage knuckles and irrigate rust from eyes. An hour and a half and that will be behind me.
So, word to the wise for you purists out there. Check your hitch well and don't end up on YouTube.