You really don't get an increase in capacity. More often than not your axle is rated to be right at the edge also. So unless you are upgrading your axles too, bigger tires will just give you a nice warm fuzzy, lighten your wallet, and do nothing to increase your capacity.
In other words, before you spend a dime, check your axle rating and see if there is reserve capacity over and above what your current tires are rated for.
spike99 wrote:
bigjoey38 wrote:
I have looking at a few TT. some say get the double axle much better then single. Is the correct and is a single doable?
If exact same trailer came in both double or single axle, I'd buy the "double axle" trailer every time. Double axle rides smoother, less chance of blow out and more braking power. Win-win of many different fronts.
All things being equal, the same trailer would not come in either single or dual axle. It's all dependent on weight requirements. The axles and tires that are installed are the minimum needed to meet the rated CCC. If in fact there was a choice, the dual axles are better more because they spread the weight out, not because of ride or blowout issues.
That said, up until my current trailer I've nothing but small single axle trailers with 13" wheels. I've towed all over the country with my trailers. Many years. Never a problem, and I notice no difference in "smoothness" of ride between single and double axle. Stay within weight ratings, keep the proper inflation, and drive no faster than the rated speed of the tire and you'll be fine no matter what size tire or axle configuration.