BettyOKLPN wrote:Yes, OK stands for Oklahoma. My first name is Betty. My intention for the post was not to say I'm looking to buy anything right now. I was wondering what type of trailer would be suitable for a small homemade camper that a person could stand up in. Are the 4x8's from Harbor Freight or the 5x8's from Northern Tool good enough?
Hi Betty
I am glad you stayed too!
I apologize if I came off as rude in my initial post!

As others have suggested.
But, it was not the intention of my post!
I truly was attempting to help you.
Now to get myself into further hot water with other Forum members that may not have the same opinions that I do??
I had just read a lengthy progress report in the "Build Journal" section of the Forum (and had just finishing commenting to Sandi on it) about another poor soul that bought one of those cheesy HF or Northern Tool utility trailers kits (great for what they are sold as "utility trailers" for hauling your yard waste to the dump or picking up supplies from your local Home Depot)
But, as a foundation for a Teardrop or Standy trailer you might want to tow across the country, they are a waste of both time and money! And a huge mistake right from the get go!
After you replace the axle with a torsion ride axle, replace the wheels and tires for larger ones, extend the frame to make it fit the size of the trailer you really wanted to build, lengthened the tongue, welded up the bolt together joints and repaint the thing. You could build one to your specs for way less money.
Wish I knew the actual number of sales that were made on Amazon's Black Friday Sale of these "utility" trailers to uninformed prospective Teardrop builders that thought that they were saving money by being cheap.

And the actual number that will sit in some garage some where never to be finished.
Now, as a steel fabricator and professional street rod builder. I will give you "my opinion".
For building a standy I would look for a reasonable priced used pop up tent trailer (that are abundant and dirt cheap) and provide you with a bunch of re useable stuff you can and will use in a Standy. They are also very close to the footprint you need for most standy designs and are very easy to modify to fit ( with a welder!)
Your other choice would be to draft exactly what you want, buy exactly the torsion axle you ant and need, buy exactly the wheels and tires you want (with the correct offset) find a reasonable welder fabricator........and have it built! Money well spent and probably a savings in the long run.
Sorry if I have offended any of the HF or NT guys, but after towing my Teardrop over 34,000 mile at high speeds, I am glad the only "utility trailer" chassis I pull, is the one I take to the dump just one mile away.
Betty.........Good luck with your future project! Do your homework! And Please do not hesitate to PM if you have any chassis related questions.
Good Roads
Brian
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