Oak wrote:I will be towing with an s-10. I ask this because in my first post I asked a bunch of questions and described things I wanted to build on my tear, and someone said to be careful and not overbuild. Then I just read a post where a guy said he had to move some of his stuff towards the rear of the trailer because it was wobbling while he was driving.
Maybe I'm just unsure on what area exactly they were saying when they said overbuild.
I'll bet that someone was me!
Here's where I'm coming from. There are a number of issues with regard to weight. I'll run through them as I understand them, then the others can chip in or correct me if I am mistaken.
Total weight. The most obvious issue with total weight is whether your vehicle will pull the trailer in a manner you will be satisfied with. If you live in the midwest, a heavy trailer pulled by a 4 cylinder might be OK. Come out west and start up a 10% grade and you’d be able to walk up the hill faster than you can tow up it.
Total weight also plays into the decision of whether you need trailer brakes or not. A small, light 4x8 trailer probably won’t need them. My heavy 5x10 should probably have them. In some states, they are required on trailers over 1,500 pounds. I pull with an SUV with 4 wheel disks so it’s not so bad, but I use a lot of care when heading down long, steep grades (those 10% grades I creeped up a few days before).
Total weight will factor into what springs and axles you need under your trailer. If you hang 3,000 lb springs under your 900 lb trailer, it will bounce up and down as you travel. I towed my trailer before I built the cabin on it and there were times that both wheels would bounce off the ground. Now that the cabin is in place it tows great. Of course if you build a 1,500 lb trailer on a 1,000 lb axle you are looking to break an axle at an inopportune moment.
Tongue Weight. The last consideration that comes to my mind right now is tongue weight. Tongue weight is a very important consideration. Too little tongue weight can be a huge safety issue because the trailer can start fishtailing from side to side causing a roll-over. I mounted a bike rack on the back of a tent trailer before I understood about tongue weight. I nearly lost control of my SUV when the trailer started to wildly fishtail at 65 mph on the interstate. I removed the bikes and it towed as well as it ever did.
I hope I am making sense here. Although these trailers are small and simple, they do act as a “system” where changes in one area (weight) can impact other areas (brakes, spring rates, axle specifications, and ride quality).
Joanne