Cruise report from Georgetown to Little River Inlet

SmokyMtnGrady

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We have had less than eventful summer. Things with the business and such did not fall into place. So we took a short trip to Myrtle Beach area. We have never been there before and towed the boat along. I have poked around the South Carolina Coast between Hilton Head and Charleston and never been north of there.

We spent a couple days around Murrells Inlet. One of the things I found interesting is how northern SC coast is not loaded with sandy barrier islands and how the mainland just ends up at the beach. Murrells Inlet is a nice coastal niche in the mainland. We enjoyed our days there. Did some fishing inshore caught a bunch of undersize flounder and other fish.

The Wacamaw River is nice and we cruised it down to Georgetown and out to the inlet there at Georgetown through Winyah Bay. Lots of brown water there and in the Wacamaw. Great shelling on the islands at the inlet. The wind was 30 knots out of the south and it was a bit rough outside the jetties.

We motored up the ICW from the Murrells area to Little River Inlet. The Wacamaw River is pretty with its cypress and tupelo lined banks. The ICW through Myrtle is a a big ditch. There are a couple swing bridges along the way which gave us some concerned about being able to go under them. Little River, SC is a quaint town and the scenery is pretty out toward the inlet.

I met a fellow who was the original owner of a 1986 overnighter with the original Yammaha two stroke on it. It was a cool boat, a little rough here and there. Then I met another guy who owned a 1980 Overnighter, the style with the faux lapstrake fiberglass hull. It too was a cool boat.

I think they should call the span of coast the forgotten coast or the lonely coast. There was plenty of water to explore but not a lot of people doing it. I would consider another trip to explore especially north of Littlle River Inlet to Ocean Isle, NC.

On the way home one of my wheel bearings failed on HWY 501 near the Great Pee Dee River. We carry a spare hub and took the time to remove the old one and installed the new one. The trip should have taken us 5 -6 hours to get home, but it turned into a 13 hour drive as after I replaced the hub I went into Florence to find a boat dealer place to buy another hub kit. I discovered i put the wheel bearing retaining nut on a little too tight and it warmed the hub-bearings. So I took the time to jack up the trailer and remove the cotter pin which was an ordeal (lol) and then loosened it a little.

I stopped at Allen's Marine and the guy showed me how much play to leave in the wheel to account for friction and heat build up. I adjusted the wheel set and the new hub ran fine after I did that adjustment. Guys when traveling beyond the local ramp, I am suggesting always carry an extra hub kit along or two for that matter. I am a member of BOAT US and I thought I had their trailer assist program as we always previously paid extra for that coverage. I called them and they found a guy back in Myrtle Beach who could get out to where we were for $125 an hour ( trailer assist members do not pay for that fee) but since I was not a member I would have to pony up over $500 to change the hub out. So I did it myself and while I do not like getting stranded by a trailer problem especially with my family in tow too, it was nice knowing I could make the repair and take of the problem when it happens.
 

Parthery

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Good report....

Isn't that a new trailer? You shouldn't have had a bearing failure...I'd check the other 3 wheels....
 

SmokyMtnGrady

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It is a new trailer and I was surprised by it. They hung Tie Down G5 components on it as well. The other 3 were all running cool and normal and there is no abnormal tire wear either. In spected the other hubs visually and got behind them to see if there was any grease leaking out of the rear seals and they were all solid.

That trailer has been to the Keys 1 time, Florida's east coast twice near Titusville, the North Carolina Outerbanks a couple weeks ago for my kid's scout camp and now the SC coast, plus dropping and picking it up out of Fontana and a service trip to Palmetto Boat Center for my motor work. I guess one could say it has seen freshwater as much as saltwater. I think I have dunked it maybe 15 times in the past year of ownership.

Brian, I am looking at maybe going to Lanier for Labor Day weekend. I will let you know. I need to check out places to stay. Chances are we will camp at Old Federal or another camp ground or may be find a place on the water if it is not too late.
 

Parthery

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Let me know your plans...I'd book early as the holiday weekend will mean full campsites....
 

magicalbill

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I always seem to harp on this, probably because it was a real problem for me until I started overbuilding the trailers.

From the use you described above, it has enough miles on it to wear out bearings. I am not surprised at all, as mine failed once a year 'till I had bigger axles installed. I ran similar distances, maybe a bit more, but not much.

I don't care if it's new or not, if it wasn't set up correctly and/or is undersized for your Grady, the bearings WILL fail. Smoky, think of the bumps, rough roads in general and all the uneven expansion joints on bridges you pull that trailer over at 60+ mph. The weight of your Seafarer plus stowed gear and fuel would be over 4000 lbs. That's a lot bouncing up-and-down on your axles and frame.

The dealer DOESN'T take long distance trailering into account. he looks at numbers and sizes a trailer big enough to adequately carry your boat short distances to the ramp and back. Out-of-state trips like you take every year will cause failures, new trailer or not.

Your trailer needs two 4000 lb axles and a heavy duty frame. If I am wrong and your trailer is equipped properly, then bearing failure risk is reduced, but not eliminated. There are bearings circulating now made overseas that are cheap quality-wise and will fail prematurely. Parthery and I had a discussion about Goodyear Marathon tires awhile back..Apparently they are farmed out now and are not the good tires they used to be, sorta like the bearings.

Good news that you can do it yourself. Hope the rest of your summer is loaded up with good times. If it keeps happening, swap out and upgrade the axles. That should fix the problem; It did for me.
 

Doc Stressor

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When I lived out west, I used to trailer an average of 7,000 miles per year. I went through more bearings and hubs than I can recall. Ditto what magicalbill had to say. I learned the hard way that you need to modify your trailer if you are going to do much serious hauling.

Bigger axles are just the beginning. I found that oil bath hubs were the ticket for long distance drives. I never had to replace bearings after the second time I put them on the trailer. I say the second time is because the first time I used a Kodiak replacement kit and my old hubs. They leaked like crazy. But at least I could see when the oil was low. The second time around I used hubs that came with oil bath bearing already installed and no longer had problems.

The other issue is the brakes. Upgrade to Kodiak SS disc brakes if you haven't done so already. And keep a spray tank with salt away or the equivalent in your truck. Spray the brakes and springs right away after pulling your trailer out of a saltwater ramp. Sticking or dragging brakes with overheat your hubs and fry your bearings.
 

magicalbill

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Doc is right and brings up an important point I forgot to mention about brakes and fresh water spraying.

I had a flush kit installed on the trailer for my 232 with a hose hookup and I let it run for 10 minutes or so at the ramp. That hits the inside of the wheels, brakes, etc. Then I spray the whole trailer down.

It takes a bit of extra time..I call it "The price of paradise."
 

family affair

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Smoky,
How often did you grease the hubs? And please be honest! :mrgreen:
 

Daman858

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SmokeyMtnGrady....glad you enjoyed the cruise here. I will tell you this...boat traffic has been way down due to the price of gas.....lots of boats on racks gathering dust. My boating has probably been cut in half. And its only $4.20 a gallon on the docks here for non-ethanol gas. Next time, go the other way through the Santee Bay, past Cape Romaine and on to Charleston....a lovely ride.
 

SmokyMtnGrady

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Dave I was kind of hoping we would be able to meet up there. Maybe next time possibly I can coordinate it in advance with you guys. The jet ski rental business in the Myrtle Beach portion of the ICW is alive and well. I think they let any idiot rent those things to be honest with you guys.

I think and I will have to look it up, but the my trailer has 3,500 lb torsion axels (spindles) The trailer is rated at 7,500 pound load. I will look into the oil bath hubs and maybe get a set of 4 before next spring. I have maybe 1 or 2 short trips possible for the next month or so and then boating is over for 2014 :-(

I would enjoy lesirurely cruise from NC to Fla on the ICW down to maybe New Smyrna Beach. That would be a great adventure I would think. I like the stately live oaks of the SC and GA coasts, the bluffs and the saltmarshes and then the transition into mangroves south of Flagler Beach area.
 

Grady_Crazy

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Smokey, Maybe you, Daman858 and I can get together for a cruise down to Charleston and maybe on down to Beaufort. The Southern route is a great ride.
Doug
 

Daman858

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Sounds like a plan! The southern ride is much nicer and scenic. I try to avoid Myrtle Beach area at all costs. Beaufort is beautiful but make sure your GPS is working.....you can get lost in all those creeks very easily.