
You pays your money and you takes a chance.
Bruce
edit note: Dohhh, Andrew beat me to it.
angib wrote:How do you guys NDT-test your welds? You've got a record of your welder certification, right? Your metal frame designs have been passed by a PE?![]()
Been tested, passed.
Some of my frame designs carry 50 tons
Metal frames, particularly home-made metal frames, are absolutely no guarantee of avoiding problems, as several posts on this forum will support. But they are certainly less likely to give you problems.
You are absolutely right on both counts.
It's also one less sue point if the trailer is mostly in one piece after an accident.
It's worth repeating that a frameless design is not something for the novice and requires a higher standard of build than a 'framed' trailer.
Agreed, and I'm not telling anyone not to do it. Just be certain you are up to the challenge. Good insurance is a good idea too.
Andrew
I agree. I guess it's just my nature to err on the side of overbuilding. I should have been able to build a couple of hundred pounds lighter.asianflava wrote:There is a fine line between adding an extra margin of safety and overbuilding.
I agree, but at least when you 'overbuild' the frame, it lowers the CG of the trailer - Something you can't say in most other instances of overbuildingasianflava wrote:There is a fine line between adding an extra margin of safety and overbuilding.
Alphacarina wrote:but at least when you 'overbuild' the frame, it lowers the CG of the trailer
brian_bp wrote:I agree with Arne... the two-piece axle approach doesn't help weight much. I'd go even further - I suspect that most of these designs are heavier than a one-piece would be. Jim has much better brackets on his than most do (I think that was the subject of an earlier disucssion thread); the more common design needs even more attachment structure in the trailer than his do.
I think the axle manufacturers offer these two-piece setups for an entirely different reason than they are being used here (eliminating the weight of the crossmember part); they are to allow trailer designs with dropped floors in the middle, non-standard track widths, or other novel configuration requirements. If the space between the ends of the fixed tubes of the separate axle parts are lined up with each other and nothing is between them, then they should be one cross-trailer piece of steel tubing.
Arne wrote:I suspect if designed right, the weight savings isn't that much.. if you are using wood, you need a metal rectangle across the trailer to mount the stubs to..
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