dangerranger wrote:Thanks! I have another question. The completed Wanderer shouldn't weigh over 1500 lbs dry. I have some 2x2" steel tubing in the right lengths that is 14 gauge thickness. The wanderer was designed to sit on a Harbor Freight frame and hang over. I'm building the front and rear cross members to extend out to the walls and be under the front and rear walls. Do you think that will be too light for frame rails? I may also extend a support arm out under the door area. I don't believe it will be any heavier than the Harbor Freight frame But will it be too light? The tongue and supports will be a heavier wall material. Thanks Eric
dangerranger wrote:I notice that most here don't put shocks on their trailer. Is it just added weight? a waste of time? I'm drawing up a custom frame for a 10 ft Wanderer and would shocks be a good thing to have? Or just extra weight and time that gains very little? Thanks Eric
tony.latham wrote:I don’t install shocks because torsion axles don’t need them.
Tony
I wouldn't want the torsion to bottom out or the axle to wack the frame.
tony.latham wrote:I wouldn't want the torsion to bottom out or the axle to wack the frame.
I don't know how you'd put a bump-stop on a torsion axle. They can't hit the frame since the swing arm is outside the frame.
![]()
Tony
I see it as one of the cons of torsion that can be changed...
tony.latham wrote:I see it as one of the cons of torsion that can be changed...
They kinda have their own internal stop. The military went with Dexter Torflex on all of their utility trailers. No bump stops.
But weld one up. Maybe you're on to something.
T
RJ Howell wrote:tony.latham wrote:I see it as one of the cons of torsion that can be changed...
They kinda have their own internal stop. The military went with Dexter Torflex on all of their utility trailers. No bump stops.
But weld one up. Maybe you're on to something.
T
Tony, talk some more about torsion, please. My thoughts are there is a stop (of sorts) built in. Yet I don't know for certain.
If there's not, then it seems you'd be over twisting (torquing) the bands to the extent of damage. Most Overlander's I read about use spring suspension with a stop. I really like the axle-less torsion system for the clearance it allows. I'm researching a suspension for my Ultimate Build.
"The military went with Dexter Torflex on all of their utility trailers."
That's interesting!
Return to Trailer and Chassis Secrets
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests