T-nuts slide in slotted aluminum box beams for a wide range of adjustments.Rodger Swanson
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Nice to see a positive review from someone with a few years of experience with Trailex. I purchased one of these last year and am pleased with the versatility and quality. I did get one wheel that bounces, presumably because it is out of balance. Is there a way to balance these small wheels?
I have an SUT-500-S, overall pleased but there are some issues. Good suspension for light boats, and light weight, rust proof aluminum construction are pluses. On the negative side the aluminum brackets for the rollers are sharp edged and can damage a boat that slips off a roller. The small tires are not balanced well for highway speed and difficult to have balanced. The lights are minimal and do not provide much visibility for night travel. The plastic fenders flap about at highway speeds. For the price of these trailers, though, I would expect better out of the box. Trailex customer service was responsive to these issues, including offering to replace my rapidly worn tires, but advised replacements would likely be unbalanced also. After installing bigger highway rated wheels and tires, different roller brackets, adding a light bar to the boat transom, and adding support brackets to the fenders my trailer is good.
Now I don’t feel so bad about having gouged my own boat on the rear roller bracket! Can you tell me more about how you addressed that? And say more about the larger wheels you installed. I agree the lights are a bit minimal. If I traveled in more congested areas or at night I would definitely add more lights to the frame or, as you did, put a light bar on the boat.
Lorenz,
The replacement wheel/tire sets are Kenda 4.80-12: http://www.etrailer.com/p-AM30550.html
They are bigger but do not rub on the fenders and are well balanced at highway speed.
To replace the rear roller bracket I went with a three-roller bar; it was some work and cost to do but makes each launching and recovery much easier. With my 250 lb boat, the trailer wheels do not have to be submerged and the boat self-centers on recovery. A picture is here.
Rick, thanks for the followup. I like the rollers with the extra roller outside the bracket, but my boat would only need one of those. Who makes and sells those?
I’ve used this trailer before and highly recommend it. I assembled mine and one for a friend in roughly an afternoon and the instructions were very clear. Both have been performing well for about 6 years now and I couldn’t be more pleased. They also have a kayak trailer that I am eyeing to help ease the on and off process on my rooftop rack on my SUV, I’m only holding back because of parking concerns.
In any case, definitely recommend this company and their trailers and thanks for the writeup on one of the more esoteric, but necessary aspects of small boat ownership!
I carry my Penobscot 17 on a Trailex trailer. The problem is that with the single-beam construction, the boat rides higher off the ground. As a result, on most ramps I’ve used, I back the car up until the exhaust pipe is blowing bubbles and the boat still isn’t floating. Most ramps are steep enough that at this point I can “power off” the trailer, but the power comes from oars, so it’s a challenge.
I’m curious about the ratings on the leaf spring suspension on the SUT-350-S. What’s the maximum weight are they rated for, individually or together? The carrying capacity of the trailer is 350 lbs, but the suspension will be rated for far more, probably somewhere in the 1000-1250 lb range.
Several of the active TSCA rowers out here in the San Francisco Bay Area have had minor problems with the lighter versions of this trailer, mostly with the aluminum boat support brackets on the SUT-220-S and the fenders. A light bar is significantly safer on all small boat trailers than the low built-in frame lights, and I highly recommend one with LED lights mounted as high on the transom as possible.