screwloose
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Aug 12, 2012
- Messages
- 38
I went this past weekend to pickup a Craigslist find and was on my way home with a boat and trailer.
The boat is a 14' aluminum v hull and the trailer a bare bones Venture trailer with two bunks on a stamped steel frame about 4' wide, 4' long. Most of the trailer is tongue. The boat fits the trailer well, loads easily, (it weighs only a few hundred pounds at best), and all the lights work). The way the trailer is made, the tongue beam runs from the rear of the trailer all the way to the ball, there's roughly 13' of tongue beyond the trailer 'frame'.
To make a long story short, an officer pulled me over at 2am on my way home, probably thinking I stole the thing and after he checked out all the paperwork came back and said that the trailer was illegal, the tongue is too long. He insisted that the tongue of any trailer can be no more than 5' long.
I can find no such law on the books, he didn't write a ticket but when I called the police here they also said that a trailer tongue technically cannot be longer than 5' long. This is in NJ.
I don't think I've ever owned a boat trailer with a tongue shorter than 10'.
The tongue on this trailer extends about 3' beyond the bow of the boat, the boat sits about two inches up on the rear bunks and there's a bow roller both at the point where the frame ends and about midway up the tongue. The boat don't way enough to be of any concern, its light enough to car top if I cared to.
Has anyone ever heard of any such law? I can find nothing of the sort online. I think it was just BS so he could pull me over and check out what I was doing that night.
If it is the law, then 90% of all boat trailers are in violation.
The boat is a 14' aluminum v hull and the trailer a bare bones Venture trailer with two bunks on a stamped steel frame about 4' wide, 4' long. Most of the trailer is tongue. The boat fits the trailer well, loads easily, (it weighs only a few hundred pounds at best), and all the lights work). The way the trailer is made, the tongue beam runs from the rear of the trailer all the way to the ball, there's roughly 13' of tongue beyond the trailer 'frame'.
To make a long story short, an officer pulled me over at 2am on my way home, probably thinking I stole the thing and after he checked out all the paperwork came back and said that the trailer was illegal, the tongue is too long. He insisted that the tongue of any trailer can be no more than 5' long.
I can find no such law on the books, he didn't write a ticket but when I called the police here they also said that a trailer tongue technically cannot be longer than 5' long. This is in NJ.
I don't think I've ever owned a boat trailer with a tongue shorter than 10'.
The tongue on this trailer extends about 3' beyond the bow of the boat, the boat sits about two inches up on the rear bunks and there's a bow roller both at the point where the frame ends and about midway up the tongue. The boat don't way enough to be of any concern, its light enough to car top if I cared to.
Has anyone ever heard of any such law? I can find nothing of the sort online. I think it was just BS so he could pull me over and check out what I was doing that night.
If it is the law, then 90% of all boat trailers are in violation.