--
Denis Roy
D. Roy Woodcraft
www.ideasinwood.com
Go to the Sea Ray website, and see what a similar new boat weighs. Add 20 to
25% to be safe, and then compare to your towing specs. Hopefully, you'll still
have some slack.
(LOA is measured down the centerline, not around the curve of the hull. Even
then, it's just approximate. I just wrote a review of a 49' Boat that's really
54' long)
"Denis Roy" <nos...@nospam.ca> wrote in message
news:b3Wqc.540747$Ig.109502@pd7tw2no...
--
Denis Roy
D. Roy Woodcraft
www.ideasinwood.com
"Paul Schilter" <paulschilter@comcast,dot,net> wrote in message
news:2rOdnZ6CIpS...@giganews.com...
> Denis,
> Try here:
>
http://www.searay.com/index.asp?display=archives&tab=0&year=1988&folder2=26%
Looks safe to me.
Dan
"Denis Roy" <nos...@nospam.ca> wrote in message
news:Pz4rc.514972$Pk3.44886@pd7tw1no...
I would take every boat I ever trailered, fill it with equipment and
fuel, and stop at my local truck stop out on the interstate (NOT the
Department of Transportation weigh scales). I would let the attendant
know that I wanted to drop the boat on the scale, pull away and get
the weight, hitch up and get the gross weight. It would cost me
$6.00, and the weight was ALWAYS significantly heavier that I had
anticipated.
Good luck.
Coff
That's not how a boat length is measured. The legal LOA ("length
overall") is straight line measured over the centerline from the
foremost point on the hull (not the deck), excluding any pulpits or
bumpkins, to the aftmost point on the hull, excluding any motormounts or
other attachments.
Dry weight does not include outboard motors or outdrives--but does
include inboard engine(s), electronics, fuel, water, toilets, holding
tanks, generators, or anything else that's not part of the "base" boat.
Nor does it include coolers and all the other junk people take along
that can easily add another 100 lbs or more.
> I really need to know the
> weight of this unit, with its factory installed 100 HP outboard, to know if
> it's within the towing limits of my Venture van.
You also need to take into account extra weight IN your van, including
people and all their junk.
> Anyone have any suggestions on where to get this info, other than stopping
> at a roadside weigh scale and unhitching it on the scale?
If you know the weight of the van--which should be in your owners
manual--and the trailer, you shouldn't have to unhitch it...just
subtract 'em from the total weight.
--
Peggie
----------
Peggie Hall
Specializing in marine sanitation since 1987
Author "Get Rid of Boat Odors - A Guide To Marine Sanitation Systems and
Other Sources of Aggravation and Odor"
http://69.20.93.241/store/customer/product.php?productid=40&cat=&page=1