slowcowboy wrote:with a gas shock and just leaf srping sucpesion I can get a well smooth ride and I am still heavy enough that the passing semis do not move me around one idota!
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SLowcowboy.
Are you saying the coilovers are not needed?
I didn't say I wanted a smooth ride, but a cushy ride. There's quite a difference between "it doesn't bounce things around" and "soft as a mattress." Sort of like the difference in ride comfort of a sports car and a Cadilac. Since the trailer was designed to haul animals around, and they would spend days/week/1,000's of miles in it at a time, the softest ride possible was important.
I have no doubt your trailer rides smoothly. I've mentioned the piece of farm equipment I built that is maxing out the springs. It has a very smooth ride, but it weighs 3500#'s. "still heavy enough" did I mention I was building it as light as possible? A passing semi is only an occasional situation. 12,000 miles of travel and fuel economy is a major concern.
I don't believe just adding shocks to a leaf spring suspension will make it ride smoothly. If you have rock hard tires and a massively over-capacity spring, you will never get suspension travel. If the suspension doesn't travel, shocks are useless. HOWEVER, if you have a properly rated spring, you get the longest spring possible, and tire pressure is set appropriately, then a shock can help.
The setup I used isn't for everyone. If someone only goes on smooth to mildly rough roads, a traditional suspension will be fine. If you want a really smooth ride, or go over really rough roads, my suspension will perform better. As it is, my spring rate is too high. If I wanted to minimize bouncing, I should have 300lb or less springs for a fully loaded weight of 600lbs. The goal is to maximize the suspension travel, while still not bottoming out. With 4" of travel, I can go awfully soft without worrying about bottoming out. Being an independent suspension is just icing on the cake.
Michael