Biggest towable boat

How does everyone find their brakes hold up if they launch from a slipway? On my previous boat, the brake shoes fell out on one side when towing to the slipway one day, jamming the hub. Half an hour of swearing later and we were on our way again. Fine for a 15 foot boat, not so fine if you're at the towing limit.

With my current boat, I never immerse the trailer in water.

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Not many seem to use cable or hydraulically operated disc brakes, actuated from either a compression coupling on the draw bar hitch or electrically from the vehicle.
They appear to be the only long term system(s) in play that will stand continual full salt water immersion, providing the operator rinses them off with fresh water each time and re-grease the moving parts on the calipers annually.
A single pump of the grease gun (don't over do it) into the 'bearing buddies' nipple or spring loaded grease caps on the wheel hubs, prior to immersion, also provide good protection for wheel bearings.

It's all about keeping the water out.
 
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Hmm, having been an ex middle east trucker, I was fine with 130 tons on the back of my 56 ton truck.

Was I happy with over 2 tons on the back of a 4x4 drive. NO. Two tons is about the limit, it might go, but it dont stop. The secret being, the trailer needs to stop the truck.

Air brakes first apply the trailer brakes, then the front ones. With over run brakes you have the opposit.
 
IMO a well maintained tandem rig up to a gross weight of 3000 kgs will stop fine with 4 wheel discs on a compression coupling, providing everything is in premium working order and you have a suitable tow vehicle.
That's greasing the compression shaft, fine tuning cable adjustments (if mechanical) and checking disc pads, making sure everything below waterline has a good coat of 'Lanox' (except the pad and disc surface of course).
The problem is so few even maintain their boats correctly, let alone the poor old trailer.
 
When I bought my new trailer I should have looked at the tyres in greater detail. I am old fashioned and the modern concept of getting something which will "Just" do the job dosent work with me. My trailer is designed to carry a 2000 kilo boat. They tyres have a load weight of 530kilo each so the maximum weight I can carry is 2120 kilo. (they are ordinary 4 ply car tyres) I am thinking of putting truck tyres on with a gross weight of 3500 kilos so I get more ply rating and stronger tyres. And perhaps carry a bigger boat ?.

Indeed, go 8 to 10 ply with high air pressure, 45 to 50 psi during the boating season. The increased ply rating will reduce the risk of blow outs.
Running too low psi's is like pushing a wheel barrow full of rocks with a half flat trye, there's too much resistance.
Then in the off-season sit the trailer up on jack stands to take weight off tyres and springs, and reduce the psi's.
 
Hmm, having been an ex middle east trucker, I was fine with 130 tons on the back of my 56 ton truck.

Was I happy with over 2 tons on the back of a 4x4 drive. NO. Two tons is about the limit, it might go, but it dont stop. The secret being, the trailer needs to stop the truck.

Hence why some articulated vehicles jack knife when the trailer brakes fail, the truck wants to stop and the trailer wants to keep going. Not a nice prospect with 3500kg's of boat and trailer at the rear of a 2000-2500kg 4x4. mmmm.....
 
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