Free: Contests & Raffles.
Take it out on the water. Actually fish it. Stop being a pu**y. Catch fish and post pics. Start acting like a man.
Lokidog, had a buddy who trailered his alumaweld on a roller trailer not a bunk. Later to find out the rollers put too much stress on his bottom where the plate was welded to the stringers and a hairline crack started. Put water into a section of his boat bottom. Wonder if you have water seeping into that boat that rolled it over. Tied to the dock it wouldn't matter what the tide was, the dock goes up and down.
Quote from: trophyelk6x6 on December 22, 2016, 06:32:34 PMLokidog, had a buddy who trailered his alumaweld on a roller trailer not a bunk. Later to find out the rollers put too much stress on his bottom where the plate was welded to the stringers and a hairline crack started. Put water into a section of his boat bottom. Wonder if you have water seeping into that boat that rolled it over. Tied to the dock it wouldn't matter what the tide was, the dock goes up and down.Hey,The boat sits on bunks. I'm guessing there is a slow leak in a seam and the bilge wore out the batteries over a two week period. Still odd it would have filled up enough to tip overnight unless a big wake hit it and got the water sloshing or something weird. They'll be doing a float test after New year's, but it looks like it will be totaled, thank goodness for insurance.
I wonder if only one half of the bottom filled up with water making it extremely heavy on the starboard side thus rolling it over. The bottoms are framed in with aluminum stringers so it depends on the design but water cant necessarily fill up everything equally under the floor. I am going to check on my insurance today
They should be using closed cell foam in boats. I know the foam in my Lund is