Caveat: The Saga of the Boat Rail

As mentioned before, last Friday the boat rail pulley on the lower end failed.
On Tuesday morning, Arthur and I got up super early (4:30 AM) to catch the low tide and install a new eye bolt for a pulley to anchor the lower end of the boat trolley cable.
I didn’t take any picture, but this is what an eye bolt looks like.
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After I went to work, Tuesday, Arthur tried to pull the boat out of the water on his own at the mid-day high tide.
The new eye bolt failed. So it looked like this.
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It left us questioning our choices. Not to mention, it looked like a question mark, right?
Yesterday morning (Wednesday), we got up early again, and tried to re-engineer an anchor for our pulley. We drilled a second hole, and installed a U-bolt.
It looked like this.
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Then I went to work, and though the boat was out of the water, Arthur decided to lower the boat back into the water because the boat was crooked on its cradle.
As Arthur attempted this, there was a catastrophic failure of our U-bolt. I found this piece of our rail, and the loose pulley, near the tide line when I got home.
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And this was the base of the rail in the morning.
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So now there was no chance of getting the boat back into the water to “re-float” it and straighten it out. You can see the crooked boat, here.
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Instead, we decided to use a come-along and chains to pull the boat around on its cradle. I didn’t take a picture of this process, because I was working hard. But this is a come-along and a chain, which we used (somewhat blurry).
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We got the boat straightened out and up into the barn using the come-along and the trolley winch (but only “uphill” would work, because of the broken pulley at the bottom, so each time we needed to “reverse” we had to set up the come-along).
We paused during the uphill trip because Arthur wanted to wash off the boat. I said it would be a multi-day job, but he plowed into the effort.
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After about two hours, he said he agreed it would be a multi-day job, and decided on second-thought he’d just like to get the boat put away in the boat house. So we did that.
Yay.
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One comment

  1. Phillip Way

    What an engineering nightmare. Looks like you really need to re-engineer the whole mechanism with tougher stuff. The weight and drag of the boat is clearly too much for the lightweight materials you have been using. I would also question the safety of using the come-along which you pictured. I have used such a come-along to pull engines out of vehicles, but have wondered if it is up to the task. In recent years I have been renting hydraulic engine hoists and it feels much safer. We (Andrew, James an I) used a come-along to move a fully assembled hot-tub up the walk to the Dexter House. We had to re-set it every 20 feet or so. Unfortunately Connie made us take it out, which we did piece by piece.
    What kind a drive-mechanism do you have for pulling the cable. A motorized winch?

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