Oh boy Russ. You have us all rooting for you! LOL!
I put a year into my boat before splashing it. It needed a motor. OK. But, after going through it with a fine tooth comb we redid everything. I didn't want to be plagued by issues. It was painful and expensive, but I know the boat inside and out now and I know what it has. I think you're in better shape with a much newer boat. Just need to keep walking through all the systems and learning them and making sure things check out.
Since you posted here, you'll get some advice...right? Here's mine:
- Might be worth saving up for a trailer or converting to electric over hydraulic brakes. You have a good sized boat. I sold the trailer that came with my boat and took the $1500 and put it towards a new trailer with bunks, guides, electric over hydraulic brakes, torsion axles, LED lights, etc. It was a $5700 new trailer. I did not want to spend the money after spending what I did restoring. But, after getting everything setup and understanding how deep to back in and such, we are literally less than 5 minutes loading it (including my time walking to get the truck and trailer). It's ridiculous. For good measure, I added a second set of uprights to help guide during loading. When unloading, Dad is in the truck back it down the ramp and when he hits the brakes I am fired up and off. It's slick.
- When I load, I found the sweep spot for depth of trailer (based on my ramp angle) and gage it based on the fender location in the water. We guide boat into center on the trailer....power boat forward with outboard until she's settled on forward guide v-bunks. I hook the eye and we use the winch and power to bring to the roller. Less than 30 seconds. In the load scenario, I am on the trailer and my Dad is in the boat.
- I think you're wise to workout the bugs close to home. I thought about splashing mine in my parent's pond to start (LOL!) but opted to run it with the boot and do a pre-check of everything I could in the driveway.
Keep the faith!!!