I have a 2011 and just checked it and mine sits on the bunks. Same hull as your 2009.
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I have a 2011 and just checked it and mine sits on the bunks. Same hull as your 2009.
Cutting and moving that bow eye down is alot easier than you think.
Leave the boat on so you have it for measurement, and make sure when welding to use welding blankets to protect it.
I had to do the same thing on my Mariah, and it fits perfect now. And it was about a 1 hour job.
I don't want to seem rude, but given this trailer came from the factory with the boat, isn't it kinda crappy that I would have to be searching out a local shop to patch the unit? Does that make it weaker? The front strap is what holds the whole boat on the trailer and it makes me VERY nervous to think about cutting and welding that, especially with some of the "talent" we have in my small town.
edit: is this something that "any" welding shop should be able to do well? I know nothing about welding except I sometimes see cheap chinese products with crappy welds that look scary or stuff done by farmer joe down the road that looks equally as scary. Strength my #1 concern, but looking OEM and not ghetto a close second, especially if I ever want to sell.
And is my trailer just bad or is this a design issue that all 21Vs on this boatmate trailer have?
Call Boatmate and talk to Customer Service. They're located in Maryville, TN, next door to Skier's Choice. I delivered my boat/trailer to them and had it repaired. That was a 6 hour trip, but it was well worth it. On the other hand, yes, any welding shop can do it, but make sure it's not some hackjob.
On mine, granted it's 19 years old this year the entire section that the winch and the bow stop is bolted to the trailer frame with U bolts. Some where through the years the moved backwards and we had the same issue. I released tension and moved the assemble forward and inch and half and problem solved.
If anybody does this, be careful how much tongue weight you have.