Yes we do.
The whole rig is set up to travel, mast raising system, triple 6k axles with full electric brakes, and it tows and rides like a dream. The lessons learned from 15 years of a Mac26c were well learned and applied in earnest. The 270 can go from trailer to sails ready in under an hour, and loaded and ready to go in about the same. It takes longer to secure the junk in the cabin than to stow the mast, furler, boom and rigging.
The hard part was designing a keel guide system for the wing, and that's still not quite right, the fore/aft alignment is perfect, with a rotating keel stop which positions the keel at exactly the same spot irrespective of the angle of the trailer, but the side guides were crafted when the boat was in the water and there's a wee bit too much space between them, which is getting rectified next week after measuring the thickness of the keel.
It's interesting to see all the variations that people have done to make boats trailerable, and it's really not that hard to set one up to be easy. A little of the old "stare and compare" engineering and a little trial and error can end up with something that's simple, and a pleasure to work. I could never in this lifetime raise a 30' mast and furler by myself without a decent rigging setup, but after two attempts, it's fine. I'm not afraid to redesign/rebuild something that isn't smooth or effective, and I'll build on an idea until I get it where I want.
The 26c was built out to the point where it was ready to float in under 20 minutes, singlehanded, with a furler. It doesn't have to be rocket science.
There's a whole bunch of pictures of the trailer on the blog.
Cheers
Gary