Cruisers

How to Launch a Runabout Cruiser Down a Steep Ramp

Launching a runabout down a steep ramp comes down to controlling your descent so gravity and a slick surface don’t take over. Here’s a runabout-specific method — the why, the steps, and the mistakes to skip.

Updated 2026-06-03 6 min read For cruising and watersports boaters

Why a steep ramp is harder with a runabout

A runabout cruiser is heavy with a deep-V hull, so it needs the trailer backed in further than a small boat before it floats free — which means getting the truck’s rear wheels closer to the slick part of the ramp. Get the depth wrong and you’re either dragging her off the bunks or burying the truck.

On a steep ramp, gravity is pulling the whole rig toward the water and the wet lower third is slimy with algae. Brakes and traction matter far more than steering — the danger is sliding, not turning.

The key with a runabout: A heavy runabout needs depth to float, and a steep ramp gives you that depth fast — which also puts your drive wheels near the slime, so creep.

How to launch a runabout down a steep ramp, step by step

  1. Stop and read the ramp. Before committing, note where the dry concrete ends and the green, slimy part begins — that’s your traction limit.
  2. Line up straight at the top. Get the runabout dead straight before the grade steepens; you do not want to be correcting an angle while sliding downhill.
  3. Descend on the brakes, off the gas. Let the rig walk down under gentle braking rather than power. Keep the tow vehicle’s rear wheels on dry concrete as long as you can.
  4. Stop at float depth. Stop the instant the runabout floats — on a steep ramp that depth comes sooner than you expect, and going further puts your drive wheels on the slime.
  5. Pull out smoothly. Pull away in a low gear with steady throttle. If the wheels slip, ease off — spinning just polishes the ramp and digs you in.

Tips for launching a runabout

New to the ramp? Start with the fundamentals in how to back a boat trailer down a ramp.

Frequently asked questions

How do I stop my truck sliding on a steep boat ramp?

Keep the drive wheels on the dry upper concrete, back the runabout in only as deep as it needs to float, and descend on the brakes rather than power. Slick algae on the lower ramp is what catches people out.

How deep do I back a heavy runabout?

Until the stern just floats and the bow is still on the bunk — usually with the trailer fenders submerged. Any further and you risk the tow vehicle’s rear wheels on the slimy lower ramp.