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Raising an older trailer

swimmer_spe
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 1975 Terry 21' bumper pull trailer.

I have not decided what I will do to it. It is old, and the floor is rotten. I know I might be able to replace it.

If I am to keep it, I need to get it higher off the ground.

The axle is not the issue, the bumper is. On one of my favourite trails into a great camping site, the rear of the trailer ends up dragging.

Can I simply unbolt the u-bolts, drop the axle below the springs, and then put new u-bolts on?

I know, they sell kits, but I am wondering if I could just do it the way above?
9 REPLIES 9

69_Avion
Explorer
Explorer
Shadow Catcher wrote:
One of my concerns was ground clearance, the other concern is center of gravity. If you raise the entire trailer you mess up the dynamics. Two alternatives a skid plate at the rear of the trailer and air shocks/airbag to temporarily raise the trailer, and incidentally improve the suspension.
I have a Dexter axle I may eventually switch to a Flexride which is adjustable.
http://www.ucfamerica.com/flexiride.html

When I make trailers with rubber torsion axles, Flexiride is all that I buy. The simple splines for adjusting the torsion arm angle is really worth having.
Ford F-350 4x4 Diesel
1988 Avion Triple Axle Trailer
1969 Avion C-11 Camper

Shadow_Catcher
Explorer
Explorer
One of my concerns was ground clearance, the other concern is center of gravity. If you raise the entire trailer you mess up the dynamics. Two alternatives a skid plate at the rear of the trailer and air shocks/airbag to temporarily raise the trailer, and incidentally improve the suspension.
I have a Dexter axle I may eventually switch to a Flexride which is adjustable.
http://www.ucfamerica.com/flexiride.html

RVcircus
Explorer II
Explorer II
I recently installed the Dexter kit and took about 4 hours like mentioned. I considered just welding on new perched and U-bolts, but the built in adjusters on the Dexter perches really made the install quicker. Personally if I did it again I'd go with the Dexter axle flip kits again.
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greende
Explorer II
Explorer II
O-B is correct. We call it "Axle Flipping" but in reality you need to install a new spring perch on the top of the axle tube.
2011 Chevy 3500 HD LTZ Duramax/Allison Crew Cab Long Box DRW
B&W Turnover Ball with Companion

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swimmer_spe
Explorer
Explorer
Old-Biscuit wrote:
NO!

Axle tube is bowed upward to properly set camber



Here is some info for you........LINK


Thank you for the link. That is what I figured on doing.

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
NO!

Axle tube is bowed upward to properly set camber



Here is some info for you........LINK
Is it time for your medication or mine?


2007 DODGE 3500 QC SRW 5.9L CTD In-Bed 'quiet gen'
2007 HitchHiker II 32.5 UKTG 2000W Xantex Inverter
US NAVY------USS Decatur DDG31

swimmer_spe
Explorer
Explorer
Old-Biscuit wrote:
Yep.......

Called an 'axle flip'

Leaf springs relocated to top of axle vs being on bottom of axle.

Should have new spring perch welded to top of axle tube so leaf pack 'sits' on axle properly (with locating pin) and then NEW U-BOLTS




Could I also just rotate the axle (possibly put the right side on the left to make the brakes work right) so that I do not need to do any welding?

Old-Biscuit
Explorer III
Explorer III
Yep.......

Called an 'axle flip'

Leaf springs relocated to top of axle vs being on bottom of axle.

Should have new spring perch welded to top of axle tube so leaf pack 'sits' on axle properly (with locating pin) and then NEW U-BOLTS


Is it time for your medication or mine?


2007 DODGE 3500 QC SRW 5.9L CTD In-Bed 'quiet gen'
2007 HitchHiker II 32.5 UKTG 2000W Xantex Inverter
US NAVY------USS Decatur DDG31

oldmattb
Explorer
Explorer
That is what I did with a trailer we had for a while. There were three tricks involved:
1. Get it way off the ground
2. Undo one end of each leaf spring to get the brake drum out - It would not fit through the opening
3. Drill one hole to accommodate a pin that went between the axle and leaf spring.

Without knowing these things, and never having done one, it took me about four hours. Dirty and heavy work, but no rocket science. I needed no new parts.

Matt B
oldMattB
1998 Monaco Windsor