Mike you are in luck, Two weeks ago, I just did the very thing you are going to 
do.  On my boat they lifted it at the foreword end of the cockpit and at the 
front end of the cabin.
 I welded a 6 inch channel down the center of the trailer on top of the cross 
braces to help stiffen the trailer and support the weight. I put a 2x4 board in 
the channel for the keel to rest on so the channel legs have to face up. I 
adjusted the pads to support the boat with the keel fully resting front to back 
on the channel. I had the trailer attached to the truck and we had the crane 
move the boat foreword and backward until we had a good balance of tongue 
weight and weight distribution between the axles, that took about 4 tries 
before we got it right. I trailered the boat from Long Beach California to Salt 
lake City Utah about 800 miles without any problems . If you would like I can 
measure the distance from the ball to the front of the keel if you would like. 
I could also give you the dimensions from the ball to each axle if that helps. 
I took a large powerboat trailer and modified it to work for my 27.

>>> MIKE TAYLOR <[email protected]> 7/9/2009 1:15 PM >>>




I recently purchased a trailer and plan to bring my boat home for some 
maintenance and refitting at the end of the season.  I am beginning to get the 
trailer ready to receive the boat.  I've been reviewing the "Dimensions for 
Lifting Procedure" available on the IC27A website.  Am I correct to assume the 
boat's longitudinal center of gravity is halfway between the two designated 
lifting points on the diagram?  Does anyone have an idea how far forward of the 
center line between the trailer axles the boat's center of gravity point should 
rest?
 
Thanks for any suggestions you have in getting the trailer ready.
 
Mike Taylor
C27TR 3589 "Triumphant"  
Lake Tenkiller, OK

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