2bits wrote:The axle is almost surely leaf springs and you can remove one leaf (the smallest one) to "de-rate" and more if you like until you are comfortable with the ride depending on how many springs are there. My 71 Nova had only had one leaf spring in the rear, obviously a different spring, but you get the point.
I agree, but one note...
A suspension has some source of damping, to absorb the energy of oscillations (bouncing over bumps) and dissipate it to stop the bouncing. Any competent suspension uses something like a hydraulic cylinder with valving, which we call a shock absorber. Rubber-sprung trailer suspensions usually depend on the rubber itself absorbing energy (a characteristic called hysteresis), although better trailers (including all Airstreams for a few decades) still use separate shocks as well. Steel makes a great spring, with minimal hysteresis, so steel leaf springs need something more; I added shocks to my trailer, like every leaf-spring car and light truck out there, but most trailers still depend on friction between the leaves of the spring pack.
If you remove leaves, you remove damping. This may be okay - or maybe not - but at one leaf you definitely some other source of damping. In the Nova, that was shock absorbers; with the really cheap trailers that have single leaf springs, it's normally the a slipper setup so the sliding end's friction is used. I would consider adding shocks to any trailer suspension, but especially one in which I removed leaves.
By the way, single-leaf suspensions are becoming more common on commercial/motorhome chassis... and yes, they have shocks.