KCStudly wrote:CarlLaFong wrote:So, for the few of us who didn't graduate Magna Cum Laude from MIT, what are you trying to say, or are you just trying to impress us high school grads?
Well, I am no no MIT graduate, and, yes, we all have egos so that is fair. However, I have enough education to know that...CarlLaFong wrote:None of what that lady told you makes a bit of sense. First of all, the axle doesn't support the tire and wheel, it's the other way around. The wheel hold the axle and the trailer up. The tires will not wear any differently than they would on any other trailer. They simply go round and round
... could be totally misleading to many people that do not have enough education to know better than to believe anything they read on-line.
Do your research and make your own educated judgments. Every design situation is a compromise. Some succeed and some fail. Depends on the application. If you misjudge the loads and/or application you risk failure (a couple come to mind http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tacoma_Narrows_Bridge_(1940) and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyatt_Regency_walkway_collapse... others http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Engineering_failures).
Or you could just get lucky.
I'll crawl back in my hole now.![]()
CarlLaFong wrote:Many here have put larger wheels and tires on their existing axles and springs. Are they courting disaster? Will the sky fall?
Im hoping it (teardrop) will not be much over 1000 lbs. I have come to think my axle is rated at somewhere around 1500 ~ 2000 lbs. Many decisions to make!
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