Phew! Finally managed to log back in.
You guys may regret this.

Most people reckon I write too much - except when I write project scopes at work, then they seem very happy that I leave nothing unsaid.
That same project focus means you will see a running commentary on costs.
Westy, you would have missed me by a few hundred miles - I'm in Port Pirie.
I just skimmed your build threads. Very interesting.
Is the CCA pine and the form-ply holding up OK?
I'm home with the dreaded man-flu. Must be bad, my (female) boss took one look from the other side of the office and sent me home.
While languishing in quarantine I called a few SA plywood sellers.
Even Duck Flat Wooden Boats said I was out of luck with regard to special ordering larger sheets than 8 x 5.
I wanted to apply some frame-less techniques I had in mind, but appears the answer is no.
I have had a closer look at the trailer I bought, especially in the light of reading that your frame is made of 3 and 4 mm thick steel.
The steel is 2.5mm thick 75 x 50 RHS on drawbar and main rails, 50mm square tube cross members. I measured 70 x 50 originally. Musta been somewhat taken with the drink.
I think I'm pretty right for what I want - mainly bitumen roads, some made gravel roads, no serious off road travelling.
Those bolt together 8 x 5 Easytrailers out of Melbourne (look like the US Ironton trailer) are sold as teardrop camper chassis and the draw bar is 65 x 50 x 2.7 mm C channel.
The main frames are 50 x 75 C channel.
I think my homemade trailer compares OK at less than half the price if freight and rego is factored in.
If I ever figure out the photo stuff I'll post some.
I am going to make a few chassis mods just the same.
1) I can remove 0.5m of draw bar with no structural changes. That will delete the winch post, winch and the v block post that captured the bow of the boat.
2) One area that is under done is the spring mounts, IMO. They are welded to separate pieces of angle iron that bolt to the main frame, so you can adjust the weight distribution by sliding the angle along the rail and bolting in the new spot. Typical Aussie boat trailer stuff but the execution is bad.
The angle iron is quite thin. My mate came good with two 1.2m lengths of 50 x 50 x 5 mm galvanised angle. The spring mounts will be the toughest thing on the whole trailer.
Any steel I weld in will be galvanised - even though the rest of the frame is mild steel with galvanising paint, any electrically connected metallic zinc coating will help protect the whole trailer.
3) Springs are as-new Al-Ko brand. Only 600 kg capacity when I googled the part numbers. May swap them out - cost will be about 70 dollars. It'll depend a little on what the final weight comes in like. It is currently sitting at 140kg before I remove the winch post and bilge boards and fit the heavier spring mounts.
I'd say the two will balance out. I'll have a good 3 speed winch to sell, so nearly cost neutral as well.
4) One of the reasons I skipped buying a bolt-together Easytrailer (apart from the bolts) was the tiny 12 inch wheels, with fairly light looking bearings.
So I bought a trailer with 10 inch wheels.
Still, new 13 x 4.5 Sunraysia style wheels with new 155 x 13 LT tyres are only $87 each delivered. That's two 13" wheels for the price I just got quoted for a single 10 inch spare!
Rims are zero off-set. Current wheels are 20mm positive offset. My measuring suggests that new wheels may just about fit right in without having to move the mudguards.
Bearings and hubs are proper conventional HT Holden hubs.
Well that's enough for one post, even from me.