schaney wrote:Boilermakerfan, I've toyed with the idea of a trailing arm trailer supsension. Still in the sketches and

phase. Would provide a very nice ride and be very tunable, although most likely fairly costly.
I'm assuming you can come up with swing arms some where between the massive ones on Adventure off-road Trailers and the small ones on Rack and Roll kayak Trailers. I'd start by looking at King and Fox for a coilover shock setup. The AirZone air bag we've discussed before also look like an interesting way to go. It would be nice if an off-the-shelf VW setup would work.
The hubs you mentioned,
http://www.ryderfleetproducts.com/cgi-b ... detail.jsp look interesting, is there more spec information available? Is the 115mm bolt center a standard one?
Scott
I haven't come up with anything yet, but I haven't really dug into the R&D outside of the few things we have talked about offline. I haven't dug out any old V-Dub magazines to find the right dealers either. The AirZone is great and would be incredibly flexible, but they are very expensive so that is why I started to look at coil-overs with progressive springs. Massive trailing arms may not be a bad thing as the mass would help to dampen the suspension since we're trying to take a system designed for a 3,000 pound vehicle and use it on a trailer that could be about 600 pounds dry and only about 1,800 pounds heavily loaded. The bigger challenge will be finding a good length for both the trailing arm and shock that will allow for a lower ride height, but still keep the suspension geometries in line for the best performance empty and under load. I'll be digging into the general rules of thumb for those magic ratios over the next weeks.
That hub was just one that I found linked in another TTT thread. It used to be more common as an import vehicle bolt pattern, but the wheels I'd want to use aren't available in that size, nor are the common low cost steel wheels for trailers. A 4-bolt 4" and 5-bolt 4-1/2" (114.3mm) are the two most common sizes I have seen on trailer axles.
If I can't find a workable trailing arm suspension I will just go to a torsion axle which can be purchased to cover 1,000-2,000 pounds, or 600-900 pounds if somebody is really trying to go fly weight.
- BMF