Jan-31-2017 12:37 PM
Feb-02-2017 10:47 AM
Feb-02-2017 08:09 AM
Feb-02-2017 04:56 AM
Feb-02-2017 04:33 AM
tragusa3 wrote:
In my particular case, it hadn't seized, but the entire thing was missing. Even the axle nut had sheered its pin and was hanging on by a thread or two. On a dual axle trailer, I could have removed that tire the rest of the way and done as mentioned above.
By limped, I didn't mean I would drive like there were no issue. Again, in my case, I could have gone a few miles an hour to the campground that I was only a few miles from. Even that much would have saved me from having my family spend hours on a roadside.
We could argue specs for the axle, etc. but that's what I'd chose every time given the other risks.
Feb-02-2017 02:24 AM
Feb-02-2017 01:35 AM
fireman41 wrote:jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:
I had a bearing failure on our single axle when we had it. In the middle of nowhere. Cost us 3 days of downtime before we could roll again. Not sure if a double axle would have saved us, but I pretty sure it would have. At the very least, it would have allowed us to limp to a campground.
Why would you be able to limp to a campground with a double axle trailer, but not with a single?
Is this a trick question? With one axle, you aren't mobile if a bearing fails. With a second axle, you can still roll.
Not a trick question at all. If a bearing is seized (I'm assuming that's what you're referring to), the wheel won't turn whether on a single or a double axle trailer. Would you drive with a wheel not turning? If the wheel does turn, it will turn whether on a single or a double axle trailer and you can limp along with either.
With a tandem axle trailer, you can pull the tire and wheel off of the bad hub and chain up that axle. That why you can proceed down the road on 3 wheels.
Feb-01-2017 07:04 PM
jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:
I had a bearing failure on our single axle when we had it. In the middle of nowhere. Cost us 3 days of downtime before we could roll again. Not sure if a double axle would have saved us, but I pretty sure it would have. At the very least, it would have allowed us to limp to a campground.
Why would you be able to limp to a campground with a double axle trailer, but not with a single?
Is this a trick question? With one axle, you aren't mobile if a bearing fails. With a second axle, you can still roll.
Not a trick question at all. If a bearing is seized (I'm assuming that's what you're referring to), the wheel won't turn whether on a single or a double axle trailer. Would you drive with a wheel not turning? If the wheel does turn, it will turn whether on a single or a double axle trailer and you can limp along with either.
Feb-01-2017 05:27 PM
tragusa3 wrote:jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:
I had a bearing failure on our single axle when we had it. In the middle of nowhere. Cost us 3 days of downtime before we could roll again. Not sure if a double axle would have saved us, but I pretty sure it would have. At the very least, it would have allowed us to limp to a campground.
Why would you be able to limp to a campground with a double axle trailer, but not with a single?
Is this a trick question? With one axle, you aren't mobile if a bearing fails. With a second axle, you can still roll.
Feb-01-2017 03:10 PM
jfkmk wrote:tragusa3 wrote:
I had a bearing failure on our single axle when we had it. In the middle of nowhere. Cost us 3 days of downtime before we could roll again. Not sure if a double axle would have saved us, but I pretty sure it would have. At the very least, it would have allowed us to limp to a campground.
Why would you be able to limp to a campground with a double axle trailer, but not with a single?
Feb-01-2017 02:04 PM
profdant139 wrote:
Gee, you think you know someone well, and then bang, you find out something surprising. Bumpy, after all these years of reading your posts, I didn't realize you were a single axle person -- what kind of a trailer do you have? (I checked your profile and it didn't say.)
If you choose not to say, no worries -- this can be a very private personal issue for some of us. 😉
Feb-01-2017 02:03 PM
tragusa3 wrote:
I had a bearing failure on our single axle when we had it. In the middle of nowhere. Cost us 3 days of downtime before we could roll again. Not sure if a double axle would have saved us, but I pretty sure it would have. At the very least, it would have allowed us to limp to a campground.
Feb-01-2017 12:33 PM
Feb-01-2017 11:11 AM
Bumpyroad wrote:
my current TT is a single axle one with no issues. sort of a blessing when I have to replace 2 small/cheap tires instead of 6 big/expensive ones.
bumpy
Feb-01-2017 10:51 AM