JDMackes -
I like your solution. If I had spotted it earlier, I might have gone that way. Instead, last spring I bought a Vevor QYC1500 trailer mover, to move my boat trailer around on an unpaved surface. It is a manual mover - not powered - and it is a moose! The ground where I use it (second pic) is slightly sloped, the surface is crushed rock (aka "crusher dust") mixed with coarse sand, a few small rocks, and tufts of coarse grass. This surface completely defeated an earlier lighter-weight manual mover, and I had to put down sheets of plywood to roll it on. With the Vevor, I can move it around easily on this surface, in any area where the slope isn't too great.
Things I liked about it?
o It has an enormous weight rating - 1500 pounds trailer tongue weight.
o It has three wheels - two BIG 16" pneumatic tires that roll right over the small rocks that blocked the lighter mover with 6" wheels, plus a third rear wheel so the thing can't tip under load.
o The load-bearing wheels are wide-spaced, making it very stable even on side slopes.
o It comes with a 2" hitch ball that mates directly with your trailer's hitch. Ball height is easily adjustable over wide range, by pulling a pin.
o Because the hitch ball can be high off the ground, the mover can be pivoted almost 360 degrees without hanging up on the underside of the trailer's A-frame. My previous mover would swing only about 60 degrees in each direction, which is too little to make a tight turn.
o
THE BIG ITEM? Like any manual mover, it has a T-handle on the end of the tow arm, so you can grab it and tug it around by hand. But the T-handle can be removed, and a real trailer hitch (included) installed in its place. This means that you can do a fine tweak of the starting position manually, then use your car/truck to do big movements across the yard or up a slope, and then do final positioning by hand. This is especially useful when I use the truck to move the trailer until the wheels are on the smooth level floor, then inch it into final position by hand.
Vevor actually makes three versions of this mover. One has a hitch weigh rating of 500 pounds (too small), one is rated at 1000 pounds, and the one I bought is rated at 1500 pounds. Only the 1500-pound version has the trailer hitch option. The price difference is small, so I went with that. It is available from Amazon, Home Depot, Tractor Supply, etc. The list price appears to be about $160, but I caught a sale at Amazon and got it for $120 with free shipping.
Bill
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