MCNPathfinder
Petty Officer 2nd Class
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2010
- Messages
- 121
Hey everyone. I'm more or less a newbie when it comes to the boating world. I've been dabbling over the past 3-4 years with 60s-70s Larson runabouts, but purchased a 23' Cobia cabin cruiser last season. Right now it's in storage (and I CANNOT wait for the season to start again), but I figured now is a good time to start saving up the money for repairs and trailering accessories. The previous owner told me it weighs right around 3800-4200 pounds with the double axle trailer. It's got a built 305 Chevy V8 in it. I love it, but trailering it is a chore and can be scary. I tow it with a 2001 Nissan Pathfinder with a 3.5 V6 (towing capacity of 5000-6000 pounds), most of the time in 2WD (except when the launch won't cooperate). The first time I towed it, I took it on the freeway like I have with my other boats, and it started swaying really badly from left to right. It scares me, so it was fine for last season to pull it on the backroads. It took twice as long to get to the launch, but I was okay with it because it was much safer. So what causes the swaying, is the boat not properly situated on the trailer then? I'm good friends with the previous owner, and he suggested that I move the boat forward on it's trailer about 4 inches. It makes sense to me because that V8 seems to hang off the back a decent amount not putting as much weight on the hitch as it should thus raising the back end of the truck. The suspension is all independent springs on my truck since it's a soccer mom car you know, and I've heard because of the springs (and unibody), the sway is amplified. I'm for sure going to be putting electric brakes on the trailer. My primary question is should a weight distributing hitch be something I should be investing in with a boat that weighs as much as mine or are they really for heavier loads? I'm not a fan of spending money (especially in this economy), but I have no problem spending money that keeps me and the people driving around me safe due to my lack of trailering experience. The last thing I want to do is kill someone because I wanted to save a few hundred bucks. The lake I frequent is about 15 miles away, and I would probably just call it good moving the boat forward and putting some brakes on it, but this summer I plan on venturing out a few more places some at least 3-5 hours away (like 300-500 one way), and I want to be as safe as possible with this thing. Do trailer axles ever need to be aligned like cars do when you get new tires or something? I just replaced the front two leaf springs on it last season, is that something I need to have checked out? Thanks for the help, I do appreciate it!