Marylou, your post is eerie - I had just posted something similar on another thread (
Rimple for 4 design). But I thought I might spell out my logic here.
I have used some assumptions that I think are reasonable:
- What matters is the proportions of the trailer - that is, the ratio of the overall height to the overall width, not the ratio of just the body.
- The limit of the height-to-width ratio should be around the maximum that manufactured trailers reach - in other words, I'm assuming they've pushed the height as far as it's safe to go, and we shouldn't push it any further.
- The centre of gravity of a homebuilt teardrop is not significantly higher than for a manufactured trailer, as a proportion of its height.
Then I looked at manufactured trailers and came up with these limits:
- For travel trailers, the max height is around 12' - on a standard width of 8', this is a height/width ratio of 150%.
- A typical travel trailer height is around 10' 6" - a ratio of 131%.
- Smaller trailers seem to have a lower ratio - a Scamp is down at 110% (88"H x 80"W).
So I reckon a rule of thumb would be:
- a 100% ratio is very safe;
- a 125% ratio is typical;
- a 150% ratio should be the absolute limit.
In your case, Marylou, the numbers look like this:
- A HF 4x8 trailer is about 19" to the top of the frame from the ground so your overall height would be 66"+19" = 85"
- A HF 4x8 trailer is 66" overall width.
- The height/width ration would be 85/66 = 129%.
So I'd say you should be OK, but without a lot of safety margin - there would be days when it would be sensible to not tow this trailer. If you went to one of the new 5x8 HF trailers, your ratio would be 85/76 = 112%, which looks a lot better.
I haven't looked at the weight at all - from what I've seen, all homebuilt trailers are heavier than a manufactured trailer of the same size and, in this one instance, extra weight is not a problem.
I hope this helps more than it confuses!
Andrew