Hi! I haven't been here in a LONG time, what with life getting in the way. I was going to build a camper on a little trailer I had, and did, sort of. I built a box, then found a cool retro pop-up, which got me going quicker. The secondary purpose of the box was to haul stuff to our new place in SC. That's where we are now. I finally took the trailer on it's maiden voyage, which was a disaster! It would not safely go more than 50-55 without fishtailing all over the place. It took us 15 hours to go 600 miles on back roads- white knuckles the entire time.
Here's some data- The box is 6' high, 7' wide, and 10' long, plus a 2' Vee in the front. I also sloped the top for the front couple feet in an attempt at reducing drag. I had it full of stuff with a fairly low center of gravity- maybe 3000 lbs for the trailer plus load. Tongue weight seemed to be plenty. The trailer has a new axle and 15" tires, properly inflated. The tow vehicle is a big 3/4 ton van, weighing about 7,000 lbs. Again- new tires and proper inflation. There are only two possibilities I can come up with. 1) the hitch on the van is higher than the trailer, so it slopes back a good 4" or more. I think that's the culprit, and I'm going to get an adjustable height hitch to level it out. The only other possibility I can think of is some weird aerodynamic thing going on between trailer and van. The tongue on the trailer is very short, so it is quite close to the back of the van.
I once had a Bronco II that I put a bug deflector and a car-top carrier on. It drove fine with either add-on, but became dangerously unstable with both. Obviously an aerodynamic problem! Any thoughts on what my trailer problem could be? Did I miss anything? I'm headed back to SC in April, at which time I'll do some (careful) experiments to see if I can straighten it out.