Jul-26-2018 06:12 AM
Aug-03-2018 03:08 PM
fj12ryder wrote:
Consider some Sailun 16" "G" rated tires, they are rated for a little over 4000 lbs. at 110 psi.
STANG23L wrote:
I would actually say heavy 14-16' trailers are quite common. Mainly in commercial operations hauling man lifts, small compactors & skid steers. I bet you've seen them around just never noticed them.
colliehauler wrote:
Lots of single axle TH appearing on the market. Was just looking at a Salem 18' TH single axle. I'm sure featherlite is better quality but like the idea of a small TH to take to remote areas. I had a post a couple of months back on subject of a single axle TH.
Aug-03-2018 01:58 PM
rerod wrote:Lots of single axle TH appearing on the market. Was just looking at a Salem 18' TH single axle. I'm sure featherlite is better quality but like the idea of a small TH to take to remote areas. I had a post a couple of months back on subject of a single axle TH.Bedlam wrote:
I prefer the tracking and weight distribution of dual axles for primary road use. Off-road, the single axle would offer less scrub resistance when turning and encourage vertical articulation rather than resist it.
Thanks for that Bedlam. Ive never towed a single axle trailer. But I'm hoping dropping from 8.5 x 24 to 7 x 16 will drop my stress level about 5 notch's.. As long as my beer isn't shook up..
I take it a 16' single axle trailer is pushing engineering boundaries because only featherlite will build one. Everyone else either will not build a narrow track or wont build a single axle one longer than 14'
Jul-27-2018 05:57 AM
rerod wrote:
Thanks for that Bedlam. Ive never towed a single axle trailer. But I'm hoping dropping from 8.5 x 24 to 7 x 16 will drop my stress level about 5 notch's.. As long as my beer isn't shook up..
I take it a 16' single axle trailer is pushing engineering boundaries because only featherlite will build one. Everyone else either will not build a narrow track or wont build a single axle one longer than 14'
Jul-26-2018 02:08 PM
Jul-26-2018 12:00 PM
Bedlam wrote:
It's harder to keep balanced on a single axle teeter totter and the longer the platform the more sensitive it is. You will want to centralize the most mass over the axles with slight bias to the front (this how Euro trailers are built). If you're not worried about tongue weight, try to get the axle shifted farther back than normal (like a toy hauler verses travel trailer) so different loads don't unload the tongue too much.
Jul-26-2018 11:49 AM
Jul-26-2018 11:40 AM
Bedlam wrote:
I prefer the tracking and weight distribution of dual axles for primary road use. Off-road, the single axle would offer less scrub resistance when turning and encourage vertical articulation rather than resist it.
Jul-26-2018 11:19 AM
Jul-26-2018 10:37 AM
Bedlam wrote:
Torsion axles work just fine - Just look at 50+ year old VW's still running around on the same torsion springs. If you are breaking torsion axles, you are probably also breaking leaf spring hardware and other parts. Leaf's advantage is that it is easier to fix or modify.
Jul-26-2018 10:07 AM
Jul-26-2018 08:57 AM
STANG23L wrote:
I've had 7x16 & 8.5x16 enclosed trailers. I've dumped them both for an 83" x 14' PJ to haul my toys. I put well over 10K miles on both the enclosed and have a little over 4K on the PJ. The 7x16 and PJ have torsion springs the other leaf. After all that I'd never go back to leaf springs for 3500-7K lb trailers. I feel they ride and track better with less tire wear.
Regardless your adding dirt roads or worse to the mix. Can't help you there. So I would suggest you look at all the trailer builds on Expedition Portal.
Jul-26-2018 08:42 AM
Jul-26-2018 07:09 AM