If that's only bolted, I wouldn't hang much weight on it. Two welds would distribute weight loading to much more of the c-channel...
Or get some steel strap and sandwich a 3 or 4" bridge bolted underneath both sections of receiver tubing-to-the-c-channel...
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"There is something about these little trailers that brings out the best in people." - BigAl, Scotland, 2010
"Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into the trees... The winds will blow their own freshness into you and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away like autumn leaves..." - John Muir,1898
Rog, that is kinda light metal, and bolting doesn't help a lot...I would consider adding a plate, welded up to the tube/frame..........
madjack p.s. a plate on each crossmember, like I show below will eliminate the "torsion" Kenny was worried about........mj
...I have come to believe that, conflict resolution, through violence, is never acceptable.....................mj
"There is something about these little trailers that brings out the best in people." - BigAl, Scotland, 2010
"Climb the mountains and get their good tidings. Nature's peace will flow into you as sunshine flows into the trees... The winds will blow their own freshness into you and the storms their energy, while cares will drop away like autumn leaves..." - John Muir,1898
madjack wrote:Rog, that is kinda light metal, and bolting doesn't help a lot...I would consider adding a plate, welded up to the tube/frame
I agree - But I think an 18 to 24 inch piece of 1 inch angle installed inside the rear channel would be sufficient . . . . just bolt though it, no welding needed. I wouldn't bother with the front channel since any weight added to the hitch would pull down on the rear channel and push up on the forward channel and the flooring should adequately support and upward thrust of the forward channel