โOct-25-2017 12:28 PM
โOct-30-2017 07:01 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
I think Mikes point is there is no (built in) toe in a trailer axel. I agree with him.
Is there a spec? Sure! There is spec's for everything. Otherwise people like me would put a set of gauges on a brand new axel and reject it because it has .07 degrees of toe in it. This way the manufactures can say, "that's within our spec's so it's fine."
โOct-29-2017 01:34 PM
โOct-29-2017 01:20 PM
โOct-29-2017 12:46 PM
mike-s wrote:JBarca wrote:Those weren't toe specs, they were simply acceptable ranges. All of them could be a 0 degree design spec, with a tolerance range. I was just asking for a link - something verbal from a customer service agent really isn't authoritative. I've spent enough time with various phone agents to know they can be inconsistent.
I told you where I received the manufacturing specifications for toe from both Alko and Dexter. They build the axles to meet that spec and their quality control checks for it.
You earlier claimed "trailer axles have a toe setting built in from the factory...the toe adjustment can be out of spec if you install the axle tube backwards."
I wouldn't have called that a "toe setting built in," as 0 degrees is obvious. But you then backed off that claim, saying "Yes the target for toe is 0 degrees."
Stuff gets bent, so they provide an acceptable range should stuff need to get rebent back into alignment. 2 of the 3 ranges were such that turning the axle backwards wouldn't make a difference.
โOct-29-2017 11:53 AM
JBarca wrote:Those weren't toe specs, they were simply acceptable ranges. All of them could be a 0 degree design spec, with a tolerance range. I was just asking for a link - something verbal from a customer service agent really isn't authoritative. I've spent enough time with various phone agents to know they can be inconsistent.
I told you where I received the manufacturing specifications for toe from both Alko and Dexter. They build the axles to meet that spec and their quality control checks for it.
โOct-29-2017 07:45 AM
mike-s wrote:JBarca wrote:Got it. You can't point to a reference, just what someone told you. And 2 of the 3 toe specs you gave were simply tolerances for no toe (e.g. Dexter - 0.25 degrees toe out to 0.25 degrees toe in).mike-s wrote:JBarca wrote:I'd like to see a proper citation to support that claim. Camber is often built in, I've never seen anything saying toe is.
The reason for this is, trailer axles have a toe setting built in from the factory.
In the link above in my reply you are quoting I typed out the Alko and the Dexter specifications they sent me when I called them.
โOct-29-2017 05:36 AM
JBarca wrote:Got it. You can't point to a reference, just what someone told you. And 2 of the 3 toe specs you gave were simply tolerances for no toe (e.g. Dexter - 0.25 degrees toe out to 0.25 degrees toe in).mike-s wrote:JBarca wrote:I'd like to see a proper citation to support that claim. Camber is often built in, I've never seen anything saying toe is.
The reason for this is, trailer axles have a toe setting built in from the factory.
In the link above in my reply you are quoting I typed out the Alko and the Dexter specifications they sent me when I called them.
โOct-28-2017 09:09 PM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
They have a toe spec, but it's always 0 on every trailer I have measured. Why would it be anything but 0 on a non steer axel?
โOct-28-2017 06:45 PM
โOct-28-2017 06:02 PM
mike-s wrote:JBarca wrote:I'd like to see a proper citation to support that claim. Camber is often built in, I've never seen anything saying toe is.
The reason for this is, trailer axles have a toe setting built in from the factory.
โOct-28-2017 05:41 PM
JBarca wrote:I'd like to see a proper citation to support that claim. Camber is often built in, I've never seen anything saying toe is.
The reason for this is, trailer axles have a toe setting built in from the factory.
โOct-28-2017 08:17 AM
flhtci2006 wrote:
So here's the deal: My trailer was loaded to 400 pounds below max weight. Tongue weight percentage was 12.3. I had just gotten the trailer back from a "repair" facility and was getting ready to head to the east coast.
I happened to notice they had installed the axles backwards, rt vs lt, not up vs down. I drove back to the shop to have them reverse the axles (130 miles). They reversed the axles and I headed home. The trailer had minor sway which I thought was canyon winds.
Also, the truck was working harder and gas mileage dropped from 8.9mpg to 5.8mpg. Also, two tires were running 45ยบ hotter than the other two.
Slowed to 35mph in a construction area on a 7ยบ down grade. Upon exiting the construction doing 35, I proceeded to speed up due to the grade.
The trailer then swayed dramatically and caused all 6 hanger brackets to bend, shifting the axles 2 inches to the left.
The road was straight with no bumps. They are saying it's my fault. There are a lot of mistakes they made prior to this (which is why they installed new axles...backwards) that really isn't pertinent.
โOct-26-2017 04:38 PM
โOct-26-2017 09:51 AM