portager
Senior Member
I've always felt that legally trailerable trawlers, i.e. 8' 6" beam and 13' 6" height on trailer, were a little too small for our cruising plans. It turns out that oversized load permits are not that big of a deal to get so why limit the boat to legal width and height limits. In many states you can get an annual permit (in California they are $90) and in other states a temporary permit, good for a few days, is about $30 to $35. You can still tow it yourself (or you could just hire professional boat movers to ship it for you), and you don't need a commercial drivers license (in California) as long as the gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) exceed 26,001 or the trailer and boat GVWR exceeds 10,001 pounds.
I decided to call this oversized trailerable trawler a transportable trawler because I got into a "discussion" on another forum where some people insisted I couldn't call it a trailerable trawler if it wasn't legally trailerable. So, I just started calling it transportable trawlers.
We have done a cost trade and decided to hire professional boat movers to move our future transportable trawler. For us it came down to a cost trade and ease of use. If we kept the boat out of the water on it's trailer we could save slip fees and some bottom maintenance, but we would need to purchase a trailer and a suitable tow vehicle. However, due to the complications of moving an oversized load we wanted to park the transportable trawler in the storage lot at the launch ramp. It turned out parking at the launch ramp is almost as expensive as leaving it in a slip and the slip is much more convenient when you want to use the boat. The break even point to pay off a custom trailer and a used tow vehicle exceeded 10 years, so we decided we would hire professional boat movers instead. I've gotten cost quotes from professional insured boat movers of ~$2.50/mi.
So how big can a transportable trawler be? That depends on which states you want to transport it through and how much your willing to spend to move it over land. The transport cost thresholds are primarily determined by the pilot car requirements and each pilot car costs about $1.50/mi.
If you exceed the legal height limit (13' 6" in most Eastern states but 14' in the West), most states will require a pilot car in front with a high pole. The height limit is the most restrictive and usually means you need a boat without a flybridge.
If you exceed the states width or length pilot car threshold then you need a pilot car behind. As long as you stay on multi-lane highways the beam limit is 12' (except Maine which is 11' 11"), but many Western states (except California) allow 14' width.
The important thing is if you choose a boat that can be shipped overland without a pilot car, then the cost of shipping it would be less than the fuel cost of driving a larger Ocean capable boat the same distance. A transportable trawler will have to be a smaller more compact boat, however the ability to transport it overland opens up a lot of cruising possibilities. I live in Southern California, where cruising opportunities are somewhat limited, but with a transportable trawler I could cruise San Francisco and the Sacramento delta, the Columbia River, the PNW, Sea of Cortez (AKA Gulf of California), ...
I would be interested in any suggestions anyone might have of potentially transportable trawlers or comments on my transportable trawler plans.
P.S. After much discussion I've convinced my wife that our first boat should be a smaller boat (smaller than the large ocean capable two stateroom boats we were looking at). Our current plan is to find a trailerable or transportable trawler and gain more experience.
I decided to call this oversized trailerable trawler a transportable trawler because I got into a "discussion" on another forum where some people insisted I couldn't call it a trailerable trawler if it wasn't legally trailerable. So, I just started calling it transportable trawlers.
We have done a cost trade and decided to hire professional boat movers to move our future transportable trawler. For us it came down to a cost trade and ease of use. If we kept the boat out of the water on it's trailer we could save slip fees and some bottom maintenance, but we would need to purchase a trailer and a suitable tow vehicle. However, due to the complications of moving an oversized load we wanted to park the transportable trawler in the storage lot at the launch ramp. It turned out parking at the launch ramp is almost as expensive as leaving it in a slip and the slip is much more convenient when you want to use the boat. The break even point to pay off a custom trailer and a used tow vehicle exceeded 10 years, so we decided we would hire professional boat movers instead. I've gotten cost quotes from professional insured boat movers of ~$2.50/mi.
So how big can a transportable trawler be? That depends on which states you want to transport it through and how much your willing to spend to move it over land. The transport cost thresholds are primarily determined by the pilot car requirements and each pilot car costs about $1.50/mi.
If you exceed the legal height limit (13' 6" in most Eastern states but 14' in the West), most states will require a pilot car in front with a high pole. The height limit is the most restrictive and usually means you need a boat without a flybridge.
If you exceed the states width or length pilot car threshold then you need a pilot car behind. As long as you stay on multi-lane highways the beam limit is 12' (except Maine which is 11' 11"), but many Western states (except California) allow 14' width.
The important thing is if you choose a boat that can be shipped overland without a pilot car, then the cost of shipping it would be less than the fuel cost of driving a larger Ocean capable boat the same distance. A transportable trawler will have to be a smaller more compact boat, however the ability to transport it overland opens up a lot of cruising possibilities. I live in Southern California, where cruising opportunities are somewhat limited, but with a transportable trawler I could cruise San Francisco and the Sacramento delta, the Columbia River, the PNW, Sea of Cortez (AKA Gulf of California), ...
I would be interested in any suggestions anyone might have of potentially transportable trawlers or comments on my transportable trawler plans.
P.S. After much discussion I've convinced my wife that our first boat should be a smaller boat (smaller than the large ocean capable two stateroom boats we were looking at). Our current plan is to find a trailerable or transportable trawler and gain more experience.