| PROCEDURE
FOR TEMPORARILY RAISING BOATS OFF TRAILERS. EQUIPMENT
REQUIRED:
1. Hydraulic Bottle Jack of a capacity that meets or exceeds the weight
of your boat.
2. 9 to 12 cinder blocks or wooden blocks 8" x 8" x 16"
3. 2” x 8” planks cut to 16” length pieces. You will
need a minimum 3 pieces, but more may be required.
4. Wooden shims as required
CAUTION:
This is a safe procedure when done correctly and
with care. If you do not feel confident in your abilities or equipment
to handle heavy weights, do not lift your boat in this way, get professional
help.
These
illustrations are not to scale.

1. Place the boat and trailer on a firm, level surface[Diag.1].

2. Lower the tongue of the trailer to the ground to elevate the transom
[Diag.2]. You may need a friend to help keep the tongue down.

3. Block the transom using cinder or wooden blocks [Diag.3]. Make sure
that there is a 2”x8”x16" wooden plank between the boat
and the blocks to prevent damage to the boat. If the blocks and wood
to not fit between the ground and the boat, you may have to use additional
pieces of 2”x8”x16" wooden plank to compensate for the
difference. If the bottom of your boat is angled, use scrap lumber shims
as required between the blocks and the hull.

4. Place a hydraulic bottle jack under the tongue of the trailer and
raise the front of the trailer [Diag.4]. When the jack extends as high
as possible, you may have to place blocks and wooden plates under the
keel (at the forward bulkhead location), to support the boat. Then lower
the jack and use wooden plates under the jack to give you additional
height. Continue jacking up the trailer. This procedure may have to be
repeated several time to gain the necessary height.

5. Continue raising the front of the trailer until the boat is level
or slightly bow high. Place blocks with a 2”x8”x16"
wooden plank on top, under the keel at the forward bulkhead to support
the boat [Diag.5]. Start lowering the jack until the weight of the boat
is supported on the three columns of blocks and plates. Make sure that
the boat is well supported on each column and is stable.

6. Lower the bottle jack. Extend the trailer jack to support the tongue
and remove the bottle jack [Diag.6]. The boat should be well supported
and stable on all three columns and the bunks of the trailer should be
about 6 to 8 inches lower than the bottom of the boat. This will give
you clearance to clean and polish the areas normally supported by the
bunks.
7. Do not remove the trailer.
It will act as a safety device to catch the boat in the event that it
slips off the blocks or if one of the blocks breaks or the ground becomes
infirm and the blocks sink.
8. Do not proceed to work
on the boat until it is well supported and stable.
9. To reseat the boat on the
trailer, reverse the above procedure.
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