Boating season is rapidly approaching so I bought everything I need to replace the carpeted bunks on my boat trailer. I chose a Caliber grey plastic kit from etrailer.com and would also like to clean the hull where it currently sits on the bunks since it's in need of cleaning, waxing and polishing. My boat will never see salt water so bottom paint might be overkill but it's still something I'm considering since it's superior to gelcoat. I've done a fair amount of research into the different ways of lifting boats and I'm not wanting to pull the trailer out from under the boat, just to safely raise the boat 6" to 12" above the trailer for a couple of hours or so.
There are some very expensive hydraulic solutions that would be great if I owned a boat yard and needed to lift boats all day, every day, but for the once a year crowd I found some solutions that involve jacks that bolt to the trailer and have an ACME style thread. Brownell makes some systems but they're also very expensive and supposedly not for aluminum I-beam boat trailers. So I'm thinking about making my own using house jacks and having some form of base sit on the ground that straddles the trailer. Failing that, I'd have some plates that fit inside the web of the I-beam to support the flanges.
As is the way, Amazon and such are flooded with cheap Chinese options that don't exactly fill me with confidence. However, Ellis Manufacturing Inc. who sell on Amazon seem to make decent products and quite possibly Chinese products, but they're not the typical pot metal stuff. I might end up spending an equivalent amount of money building my own lifting system, bu my thought is that the jacks could prove to be useful for other projects unlike the system sold by Brownell which would only serve one purpose. A good set of jacks can be used to raise and support the M6060 tractor for example, or be stowed away in the gooseneck trailer tool box to raise an axle in the event of a flat tire while on a trip.
Early days but I'll be stopping by the boat storage facility today to take a look and get some preliminary measurements to see where jacks might go, current clearance and height required.
If anyone here has any wisdom or experience to share related to this subject I'm all ears.
There are some very expensive hydraulic solutions that would be great if I owned a boat yard and needed to lift boats all day, every day, but for the once a year crowd I found some solutions that involve jacks that bolt to the trailer and have an ACME style thread. Brownell makes some systems but they're also very expensive and supposedly not for aluminum I-beam boat trailers. So I'm thinking about making my own using house jacks and having some form of base sit on the ground that straddles the trailer. Failing that, I'd have some plates that fit inside the web of the I-beam to support the flanges.
As is the way, Amazon and such are flooded with cheap Chinese options that don't exactly fill me with confidence. However, Ellis Manufacturing Inc. who sell on Amazon seem to make decent products and quite possibly Chinese products, but they're not the typical pot metal stuff. I might end up spending an equivalent amount of money building my own lifting system, bu my thought is that the jacks could prove to be useful for other projects unlike the system sold by Brownell which would only serve one purpose. A good set of jacks can be used to raise and support the M6060 tractor for example, or be stowed away in the gooseneck trailer tool box to raise an axle in the event of a flat tire while on a trip.
Early days but I'll be stopping by the boat storage facility today to take a look and get some preliminary measurements to see where jacks might go, current clearance and height required.
If anyone here has any wisdom or experience to share related to this subject I'm all ears.

