โApr-20-2015 10:22 AM
โMay-13-2015 08:51 PM
westend wrote:
If considering alike travel trailers, one having single axle and the other, a tandem set, I would choose the trailer that is built better. There is a lot unknown how a trailer will tow, regardless of axle count. Tandem axles will support more weight and for some, that is a great attribute. I have a 22' with tandem axles supporting 5K lbs. It tows like a train and stops adequately.
Even though I respect Avion69 quite a bit for his trailer building skills (and he's helped me a ton), I'd differ a bit on the ride quality of sprung axles over torsion bar for a small TT application. My current TT has two torsion axles with shocks (I've forgotten the ratings). It is the smoothest towing trailer I've owned (current count is 6). Part of that may be due to the low attitude but the torsion axles are a highway dream.
โMay-13-2015 03:45 PM
โMay-13-2015 03:28 PM
โMay-13-2015 12:25 PM
โMay-13-2015 11:48 AM
โMay-05-2015 04:33 PM
โMay-03-2015 04:37 AM
NanciL wrote:atreis wrote:
My current trailer has two axles (and weighs 3300 fully loaded and is 21' - there are MANY shorter lightweight trailers with two axles).
I've had a flat on this trailer, and it went fine... My previous trailer had a single axle. I also had a flat on that trailer, and it also went fine. No sudden sway or other danger. So long as your setup is good - a good hitch, properly adjusted - it really doesn't matter much.
But I'll bet you didn't five five miles on that one wheel when the other one blew out !
Jack L
โApr-29-2015 04:54 AM
mr61impala wrote:
Obviously wind resistance is the greatest constant load to your tow vehicle but is not rolling resistance the 2nd largest constant load? (Terrain being a variable).
Considering two otherwise identical trailer boxes would it not require more energy to tow the one with 4 tires as opposed to the one with 2?
FWIW our very first TT back in the late 80's was a 1965 Avion single axle that was around 20-21 feet long. Used W/D hitch, no issues at all.
โApr-28-2015 09:49 AM
โApr-27-2015 11:38 AM
atreis wrote:NanciL wrote:
Last month coming home on I-95 going 65 MPh I had a blow out on one of the trailer wheels. All I heard was a pop, and the trailer never even swerved.
I don't think I would have been as lucky if I only had one axle!
My current trailer has two axles (and weighs 3300 fully loaded and is 21' - there are MANY shorter lightweight trailers with two axles).
I've had a flat on this trailer, and it went fine... My previous trailer had a single axle. I also had a flat on that trailer, and it also went fine. No sudden sway or other danger. So long as your setup is good - a good hitch, properly adjusted - it really doesn't matter much.
โApr-27-2015 06:52 AM
โApr-26-2015 03:18 PM
69 Avion wrote:
The OP was asking about a trailer with a GVW of around 3,500# and a length of 22' or less.
As stated many times there are advantages and disadvantages of both. Having built trailers on and off for around 40 years I will express my experience with them.
First off, being a single axle or tandem axle has nothing to do with how well they back up. It is the distance from the hitch (coupler) to the center of the axle (or center of tandem axles) that determines how well they will back up. The shorter the distance, the harder they are to back up. Most folks don't realize that this distance also affect how well they tow. The shorter the distance the more any issues, like sway, will be magnified.
To the OP's question, in the 3,500# weight range it is hard to find decent axle arraingements with tandem axles. Most axle manufacturers start getting into their decent axles in the 3,000-3500# range. You aren't going to put two 3,500# axles on a trailer with a 3,500# GVW. Take a look at a 1500-2000# axle and you will see what I mean. The spindels, hubs, springs are not in the same league as the quality axles. I like tandem axles in most cases, especially with leaf spring instead of rubber torsion axles, because of the equalizer. Rubber torsion tandem axles can have all the weight on one axle when going over large bumps. That can create a huge problem.
Would I rather have a single axle trailer with a quality 3,500# axle or a tandem axle trailer with two 2,000# axles? I would take the single axle trailer every time. I recently built a single axle trailer with a 7,000# rubber torsion axle. It works great, but for that weight load I would prefer tandem leaf spring axles, but the length of the trailer didn't reasonably allow for that.
Most of the trailers that I built over the last 40 years were tandem axles, but there is a need, and use for single axles, just as there is for triple axles.
โApr-26-2015 08:33 AM
โApr-26-2015 06:10 AM
โApr-26-2015 04:10 AM
NanciL wrote:
Last month coming home on I-95 going 65 MPh I had a blow out on one of the trailer wheels. All I heard was a pop, and the trailer never even swerved.
I don't think I would have been as lucky if I only had one axle!