The project I have in mind is not to mark the waterline and can't be done while in the 
water:  I basically
need to level the boat, while on the trailer, as close as possible to how it would sit 
in the water.  I don't
need to be laser-precise, but I need to come close.  Or are you saying mark "level" 
while in the water, then
level that line while on the trailer?

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "For and about Montgomery Sailboats" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Monday, March 17, 2003 11:23 PM
Subject: Hardware Mounting / Level

Honshells wrote:

Is Boat Life caulk pretty much the best product to bed deck hardware?

Are the methods proposed to mark the waterline also the best way to assure whether the 
boat is sitting level
horizontally on its trailer the way it would sit in the water?  I have a reason for 
leveling the boat that is
unrelated to marking the waterline.  The function I have in mind could not be carried 
out in the water.

Thanks!

---------------------------

I'd say Boatlife is as good as any...

Marking a horizontal stripe on the curved hull isn't necessarily at all
related to how the boat will sit in the
water.  If you want to be sure it will match the actual waterline you
either need to do a ridiculous weight
and center vs volume calculation (which you DON'T want to do) or launch
it and mark the waterline with
the boat loaded the way you want.

Tod






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