Boats & Motors
Bunk trailers
Pretty much what I do fish, but not always a dock. Key for me on and off has been, bunks half way covered with water. Motor can pull boat off (150 hp, 18') with ease and nit hammering the throttle and messing up landing. Loading also half way in for bunks. Squares boat automatically. Of course this is for my boat only. May be different for everyone.
Get yourself a set of steps so you don't have to crawl over the front.
or better yet get a Drotto and never have to deal with going over the bow again. Makes loading and unloading so easy!
unloading - I back in next to the dock, step into the boat and start the motor, walk to the bow and pull the lever and back off the trailer and tie to the dock.
loading - tie boat to dock then back trailer in. Drive the boat onto the trailer until it locks, shut off motor and trim it up. Pull boat out of water to level ground and install bow winch and safety.
Well I've had the bunk trailer for 2 months. Been out 10 times. My concerns were for naught. Been very happy. Once I figured how deep to back in for unloading and more importantly for reloading it has been very smooth. And I've been out (3) times myself. Only problem getting my shot body into the boat. Tough climbing over trolling motor from trailer when your bones are shot. Thanks again for all the comments
Talked with some guides who run bunks , there complaint is the carpet wears out . Rollers last a lot longer than carpet. I have seen big glass boats trying to get back on the trailer in the Dakota,s and it was not pretty . To be fair get any boat crooked on a bunk or roller and its gonna be a problem . Me i still prefer rollers, shallow landings they shine .
My old beater boat (1981 Mirrocraft Resort boat with 15HP Mariner) has a tilt / bunk trailer that makes shallow launches a breeze. The major reason I keep the beater boat is for smaller lakes and rivers with shallow launches.
It's fun to go blasting across Lake Michigan in the Lake Michigan boat, but there's also something serene about fishing a small lake or river.
We are so freaking BLESSED to live in Wisconsin, where you can easily do either.
RR
I have three boats (small, medium and large) and (of course) three trailers, two bunk and one roller. The (large) Lake Michigan boat is on the roller trailer, and I despise that trailer with a passion. That being said, if I couldn't float the big boat off a bunk trailer, I'd be totally screwed.
I'm "exceedingly neurotic" about having my boat "just so" on the trailer. It drives me nuts to have it even slightly off-center. The medium boat is on a bunk trailer, and it glides right off with one good shove and cranks right back on with a minimum of fuss. If it's off-center, one good yank slides it right back on center.
I had to laugh when I read the one guy state that he has WAY more trouble when somebody at the launch offers to "help" load the boat on the trailer. When you fish alone, you develop a system for one man. "Help" is not typically needed or desired. I reached the point where I had to ask "PLEASE don't "help me" load the boat on the trailer". LOL.
Even us doddering old farts are typically "quite capable" of loading up the boat, having done it 1000s of times.
RR
I like bunks as that is all I have had on 26 years of boats. I fish a majority of the time solo as my days off rotate and a lot are during the week. Tie the rope off to the dock or somewhere on the truck and its easy as can be. I don't have to worry about it rolling off at the launch onto the motor (seen that and it was funny). It takes less than 5 to get it back on the boat most of the time unless the wind is off center. Roller trailers are not my cup of tea. Have a scar from a friend who had a roller trailer and said the lock was on his winch. A cut down to the bone on my knuckle proved him wrong when the boat rolled off. Either way practice makes perfect.