Hi 36guy,
You stated this
36guy wrote:
Fine, we took it upon ourselves to upgrade the suspension with 6000 lb axles, wet bushings and an EZ flex kit. Two years, a few trips, happy happy. Until, we just returned home from a trip to northern british columbia, and somewhere on the way home around 8 hours from home we bent another axle, driver side rear, toed out 1/2 inch eating the tire after 8 hours. I hit nothing, no marks, nothing to show either on truck tires or the front axle. Rough roads, lotsa frost heaves, some unavoidable surprises, but really no clue as how this has happened.
I looked up that model. Is it this one?
https://www.granddesignrv.com/travel-trailers/imagine/2600rbI know that may be a newer model, but is the floor plan the same and the GVWR of 7,850#?
6,000# axle tubes on a camper that small of a trailer should have been overkill, but the dynamic shock into a camper from potholes and other road hazards at highway speeds has damaged campers before.
Was the axle that was bent the rear axle? You did not state that; I gathered that the front axle was not bent, meaning it has to be the rear axle.
By chance, can you post pics of the following?
- The bent axle tube is trying to show the direction of bending.
- Look at the bottom flange on the I-beam frame behind the front and rear hangers. Look for "any," and I mean any distortion on that bottom flange. If that lower flange has any slight bend, please show that in pics.
- A picture of the axle tube sticker, assuming it has one.
- A general picture of how the hangers are mounted to the lower frame flange.
- Confirm what overall height (top to bottom of flanges) of the I beam main frame rail.
While I can't tell you what you may have hit, I may be able to help with what else may be an issue if you actually bent a 6,000# rated axle tube.
I have 2, 6,000# alxe tubes on my 10,000# loaded camper. ( upgraded them from 5,200#) A pothole-laced interstate in NY started to bend my main frame aft of the rear spring hanger. I had 15 miles of living ..ell traped doing 50 mph on a double-lane highway with a semis whizzing by at 70 mph in the left lane. No place to even pull off until the exit came. What the truck missed, the trailer hit. The tire spacing spread is different between truck and trailer.
In my case, I never bent the axle, but the constant jolting of the potholes started lower flange deflection on the main frame just behind the rear spring hanger. And on an I-beam frame, the flanges take most of the load. Once they are compromised, normal towing deflection will keep bending the frame down. After enough miles, the slide no longer fits in the hole in the side of the camper. The hole in the camper wall opening ends up a parallelogram, and the slide room has 4 square corners. When the parallelogram gets to be too much, the slide will not mechanically fit in the hole without tearing into the slide roof.
Suggest you check your frame now for any slight deflection of the lower flange. It can be reinforced before more damage comes.
Also curious, if you were on 3,500# alxes and went to 6,000# axles, did you change the brake drums? 3,500# and 4,400# axles can have 10" brakes. 5,200# and 6,000# axles have 12" brakes. If by odd chance, you have 10" brakes on an actual so-called 6,000# axle, something does not add up. They are not normally made that way; the bearings and spindles are all different.
I am trying to learn from your misfortune.
Hope this helps
John
2005 Ford F350 Super Duty, 4x4; 6.8L V10 with 4.10 RA, 21,000 GCWR, 11,000 GVWR, upgraded 2 1/2" Towbeast Receiver. Hitched with a 1,700# Reese HP WD, HP Dual Cam to a 2004 Sunline Solaris T310R travel trailer.