This thread is a good read, thanks all! We're on our first wake boat, but have had pontoons and fishing boats for years. It really is quite different!
Printable View
This thread is a good read, thanks all! We're on our first wake boat, but have had pontoons and fishing boats for years. It really is quite different!
Great thread - I have been boating for 5 years and found some great nuggets of wisdom.
After a close call, I now require when we stop for a break and float, everyone, must take a flotation device (at least a noodle) with them even if it is for a quick pee break. I had a kid (18 years old) jump in and he was tired from wakeboarding all day and he quickly started to struggle, threw him a life jacket, when he got back in the boat you could tell it rattled him.
Another good reminder is to always chock the wheels and make sure the load is on the chocks before you put the truck in park and get ready to disconnect the trailer from the truck. Otherwise it might roll a bit before it settles and if it goes forward it might damage the truck.
Don't fill the rear ballast bags with your new doomswell surfboard still in the rear locker...
They come with an OOPS warranty?Quote:
Don't fill the rear ballast bags with your new doomswell surfboard still in the rear locker...
https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/201...90f89223d7.jpg
Try to fight back the tears
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Well Brock can fix it. It will ride "okay" but really you're better off getting it fixed. At a minimum, you'll really need to get some fiberglass resin and hardiner and make sure any cracks where it got crunched are water tight. Because you don't want water intrusion into the core of the board. You could really "seal" it with anything, but riding it as is would be asking for trouble IMO. (And I saw it first hand and have had to repair my own boards before).