timo wrote:
I like the idea of foldup storage of the yakima. I have the impression but I'm confident in it, that the trailex is submersible but the yakima isn't.
I got the Yakima and have been using it for almost a year now......... It sure is sexy and at least a half-dozen total strangers have come up to me to say how cool it looks....... And the wheels are speed-rated for something ridiculous.
All that being said, I am 99% sure I would have been better served by vetgam's Trailex for $400-$500 less. ..... Loading height is a big deal and the Yak trailer's height is about as high as they come once you build/install the frame needed to space/balance the cradles.
Yak's foldup storage appealed to me too.... but once you fabricate the frame used to hold the cradles, foldup storage becomes significantly compromised..
If you do, for some reason, go with the Yak I would advise *not* getting the kickstand: it's flimsey and over priced. You can do much better with one of the el-cheapo folding tongue jacks from Home Depot or Harbor Freight.
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... I was wondering how people with trailers work with them at launch and recovery time.
My SOP uses the large (30cm) scupper-mount beach wheels. I pull into the parking lot and park. Then I pull the AI halfway off the trailer until it is just a little over-balanced (i.e. the stern starts see-sawing down to the ground). ..... Then I remove the beach wheels from where they are stored behind the seat. .... This brings the boat back into balance..... Then I get down on the ground and insert the beach wheels from below..... once they are inserted, I can just push with one foot and the boat slides off the trailer onto the wheels and I walk it to the edge of the water:
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipP ... JaRW5TYzBRLast time I put a clock on it, the time was less than thirteen minutes from trailer to being fully rigged on the edge of the water. .... That was a lucky day, however, and the time is more typically twenty-some minutes.
The only possible argument for the Yak that I can imagine is that maybe the Trailex is so low that the beach wheels cannot be inserted with the hull halfway off of the trailer. ...... I doubt that is true, but it is something that would need to be verified...... and even if it were true, I would expect that replacing the stock 8" wheels with 12" wheels would cure it.
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It seems to me that if the recovery is done from the parking area, and not directly from the water, then there's a need to heft the boat up onto the trailer. Surely that's less effort than hefting up to the roof of the car, but it's effort, and a trailer is all about trying to avoid that, and that would suggest the trailer lower to the ground would be preferred, all else constant. Is that sensible?
Totally. ..... That's the main functional issue with my Yak trailer: higher off the ground means more effort to load the boat. ..... I finally wimped out and rigged up a 4:1 pulley system attached to the roof rack on my pickup truck.... so that issue has gone away for me, but it is not to be ignored and, with the Trailex trailers lower is better.
One mitigating factor for me, though: my pickup truck is abnormally high - even for a pickup... didn't realize that when I bought it and would not have bought if if I had known.... but the Yak's greater height means that the boat is visible in my rear-view mirror. .... This is nice when backing up and somewhat reassuring when driving down the road. ..... OTOH a couple of PVC pipes sticking up from a Trailex and/or the hull would probably accomplish about the same thing - and your vehicle is probably not as high as mine.
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Are there any other options to consider?
Turnpike tolls. On the Atlantic City Expressway and feeder bridges they really rape the small trailer users.... can't recall how badly, but it's something like triple the regular toll.
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Are all equally accommodative of hobie ai/ti cradles?
No. .... You need two things in a trailer when using cradles: the ability to mount the cradles the proper space apart, and the ability to move the cradles fore/aft as needed to achieve the proper hitch weight.
The Trailex, with it's slotted alu extrusions, allows both spacing and fore-aft adjustment to your heart's content. ...... The Yakima Rack-and-Roll, OTOH, demands that you build your own frame to give the needed cradle spacing and allow fore-aft adjustment:
https://photos.google.com/share/AF1QipP ... JaRW5TYzBR It's not exactly rocket science.... and pressure-treated 2x4's are not that expensive.... but it's a significant time sink until you get it worked out. .... I kind of enjoy that sort of thing, but this one I would gladly do without given the lower cost and superior functionality of the Trailex products.
Oh yeah.... I almost forgot: I recommend the Trailex over the Yak..... -)
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2015 AI in "Dune" - "The Grey Pig"
2017 Trailex 450 Trailer
Pre-September 2015 cradles
(anybody want to buy a slightly-used AI SpinKit?)
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