I have some newbie questions about axle specifications. I've been planning to use a Dexter Torflex axle but I spoke with Grant at LilBear this afternoon and he said he *might* have an axle in inventory that would work for me, but I still have to nail down the specifications.
I'm building a nominally 5 x 10 teardrop using Kevin Hauser's Kuffel Creek Comet plans as a starting point. I've widened the frame somewhat from Hauser's specs, so the chassis (without tongue) is 115" x 56". With 0.5 inch plywood walls outside the frame that produces 57" trailer width before adding wheels.
Although the plans call for a #9 Dexter axle (1000-2200 lbs capacity), I'm planning to use my teardrop in some fairly rugged off-road applications. I don't really know what sort of weight to expect yet, but I'm assuming the dry weight will be somewhere in the 1000 lb range (more? less?) if I build according to plans. We often camp in remote places for a week or longer, taking lots of supplies, bikes, etc, although the TV is a compact pickup so it can carry stuff too. Nonetheless, the trailer load will always include lots of water, battery, propane, gear, etc on top of the dry weight.
Question 1: Despite the extra carrying capacity of the TV, would it be appropriate to order a heavier axle, i.e. a #10 Dexter (2300-3500 lbs capacity)? Is there a downside to doing this? I assume it would be stiff at lower loading, but is that a problem? I anticipate bouncing along many miles of washboard, and that's the good roads....
Question 2: Reading AT's axle/suspension info, they suggest that rubber torsion axles might NOT be good choices in dusty, washboard environments. They said that in their tests, rubber torsion axles failed when dust got into the works. How likely is this to be a problem? Did AT have this experience because they beat their axles to death, or is premature failure a frequent issue when rubber torsion axles are used in dusty, rough applications? Has anyone here had this experience? (AT didn't like leaf-springs either....)
Question 3: My frame is 56" wide, so that's my outside bracket to outside bracket length, but I'm not sure what to specify for a hubface to hubface length. I'm at a loss to figure out the hub-to-hub distance but Hauser's plans specify a 60" hub-to-hub for his 47" wide frame, so 6.5 inches for each side of the trailer (outside frame to outside hub face). Applying those dimensions to my chassis, I get 56" + 13" = 69". Does that sound correct? I can't find hub dimensions anywhere, so I'm assuming that they should be similar and if those hub-to-hub lengths worked for Kevin Hauser they should simply scale up for my trailer. Is that right?
Grant (if you're reading this), you mentioned in another thread (long ago) that you usually use 71"-72" axles on your 5 ft teardrops. If you have one of those, would it be appropriate on my 56" chassis or is that too wide an axle for that frame? Damn, I wish I'd had this conversation BEFORE doing all that cutting and welding!
Question 4: Hauser's plans call for a 22.5 degree down start angle. It looks like that will yield something close to the ride height I want (~ 16 inches) at light load on either a #9 axle or a #10, using a 15 inch wheel in either case. Does that sound about right (assuming 1000-1200 lb trailer weight)?
OK, I think that's it for now. I'll post pics of the work accomplished so far soon. Not much to see yet but the steel frame though.
Best,
Mike C.