Used trailer for your boat? Good luck
In my experience of searching for trailers, most are custom made and cost several thousand dollars to have made. If you can, try and find a used trailer that will support the boat on craigslist and buy the popper jacks seperate, then find a reasonable welder shop to weld the jacks on the trailer to fit your boat.
This is the route I've considered for my O'Day, cost for a fin keel trailer have been quoted to me between $4000 - $8000 brand new with surge brakes. For that cost, I can deal with a transport company! Also, I'm sure if you shop around you'll be able to find someone who will transport your boat and step/de-step the mast at no additional cost. Good Luck!
Finding a serviceable used trailer is hard to do. There are several stories in the archives of this forum that make you think twice.
Start by reading all the posts with:
http://forums.oday.sailboatowners.com/showthread.php?t=113139
Maybe go to Lake Ontario and see Uncle Bill's project.
Sailboat trailers do not last as long as the boats, especially if ever associiated with salt water. Modifying a trailer not made to handle the gross weight of your boat is wrong.
Modifying a trailer and making it a correct fit for your boat takes time, parts, tools, and maybe welding skills. Modifying trailers correctly is done all the time. That is how many small trailer places make their living.
Then there is buying a trailer. The cost of aluminum has skyrocketed in the last few years. And Aluminium beams need to be about twice as thick as steel. The steel trailers must, read must, be galvanized. Painting last about two years.
As pointed out new trailers for your boat made of galvanized steel would cost $4,000 to $5,000 plus. It would be tandem axle. It would have brakes on both axles.
One company that has measurements of your boat is:
http://www.triadtrailers.com/
From down payment to finish is 4 to 6 weeks depending on their schedule. Mr. Orro is available by phone to you for questions. They make one of the best trailers for sailboats. But then they charge for their trailers.
Another advantage of having a trailer available besides storage is in event of hurricanes or other disasters is being able to move the boat inland, say up to 'uncle Bill's'. Or vacation next year at Sodus Bay?
Does the quote given by the yard for stortage include stands?
Your boat is one that still fits on a trailer, but is kind of big to launch and retrieve. Having the yard to that may cost each fall and spring, but then they have equipment to do just that.
Many boats in your area are shrink wrapped. Just visit Lake George this time of year and see them wrapping boats like crazy.
Most of us use tarps.
Or you can just sail south and be a snow bird.
Ed K
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