
So here's my latest attempt at making a kayak trolley. After talking with my Dad, he shared the idea of making one small enough that it could be stored with the kayak at all times to facilitate moving it around - in the truck, on the rack, etc. Only time it would be off the trolley would be in the water. I also thought about how I could take it with me in the hatch as my brother mentioned - in case of a portage or a long walk from the truck to the launch site.
So here's my latest attempt. It is made of 1/2" PVC pipe and is similar design to my previous, larger trolley. The wheels are smaller (6" lawn mower wheels) and the overall size is smaller as you can see from the beer can next to it.
Even fully assembled, it is small enough to fit in the back hatch of my Prijon without any issue... though it doesn't leave a whole lot of space for anything else. For this reason, I thought I would try to use a pipe coupling. This coupling mounted in the middle of the one cross piece, allows the trolley to be broken in half. This should make it a little easier to store... will need to see how much structural loss there is due to this coupling or if it tends to spin at all.

Finally, I wanted to include a picture of the axle that I have used. Just a 1/2" tee with a 7/16" washer Gorilla glued to one side. Drilled a hole out the other side and used a 1/2"x4.5" hex bolt and a self-locking nylon nut. Not pretty, but it does seem to work.

I need to do some trial runs with this set-up, but I think it will work pretty well - worked around my basement floor without any problem. Not sure that I would put my $4000 fiberglass kayak on it, but if I had that kind of do-re-mi, I wouldn't be making these things out of PVC on my garage floor.
Total cost: ~$20 (40% wheels, 20% hardware, 40% PVC)
2 comments:
White Ford Falcon--- This is a stupendous cart! I wish I had one or two. You need to produce as an eBay winter project and sell and save money for a Niagra Falls trip (or to pay off that fancy house deck!)
Do you have a way to affix straps? The strapping system, to hold boat and prevent strap tangles, et cetera, is as important as the cart itself. Just a thought to complete the project.
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