You're right... what a pot you can stir up talking about this stuff...
Welded versus bolted
Angle versus tubing
steel versus aluminum
12" wheels versus 15" wheels
There are myrid opinions!!!
This, of course, is only my twopenny's worth...
I've built a HF trailer, and it was easy. Very easy to build. Bolts seemed the only way to go! And it worked just fine on the road. We went to the U.P., thru Canada, thru New York, Ohio, and PA with it. Well there is one thing with the HF trailer... Chell didn't like the way it bounced on bumpy roads. And we have a lot of those in Detroit! The fix would have been to put shocks on it. But we sold it to a couple in N.Y. And from what I can tell, they love it just the way it is...
I've build a Herculean trailer out of 1/8" steel 2" square tubing. Had Frank's friends weld it up. I thought, gee this is so simple. It went way faster than the bolts. One morning and it was complete. And I know that welds are stronger than bolts. So now, this was the only way to go. To fix the bouncing problem I went with a dexter torsion axle. That worked great. The trailer rides nice and soft, and Chell no longer has fits when driving over railroad tracks.
Here I am at trailer #3. First thoughts... buy angle and bolt it, it's easy, and I don't need to learn welding. What I am going to end up doing is having the corner muffler shop weld up a trailer built out of 2" sq tubing. It's easy and it's affordable. I'm looking at about $200 for the steel, and maybe an hour or two of welding. Throw in an axle for $189 and I've got a bulletproof trailer for a song. Yea, I can't complain!!!
I can only hope that all you guys have muffler shops around the corner from you that like to take on trailer projects on the side!!!
Mike...
The quality is remembered long after the price is forgotten, so build your teardrop with the best materials...