I called in to the trailer shop today and asked about fitting shock absorbers to my TD frame. The info the manager gave me was very interesting. He explained that the correct form of shocks to fit on a trailer or TD were not not shocks at all. They were more correctly called "Dampeners". They also worked in reverse to a standard shock absorber on a car. The trailer dampener worked by collapsing easily as the axle went upward and returning slowly as the dampener expanded out again. He said that the common leaf spring would break if the shock absorber resisted the upward thrust resulting from either the bump or the hole in the roadway. This pounding fatigued the spring where it was fitted to the axle and it was at this connection that the spring would eventually snap. Why this does not happen with a car fitted with leaf springs I don't know. It may have something to do with the short length of the spring and its stiffness, ie, its "spring rate". What he explained made sense to me so I will try out this form of dampener on my TD.
The next problem is how to mount the dampener as close to vertical as I can on the TD frame. The extended length of the dampener is 14.9 inches and the closed length is 9.8 inches. I might be able to lower the attachment point on the spring shackle by dropping the attachment point 2 inches by fabricating a "dropper" but this comes at an expense I don't want. It decreases the ground/road clearance and the attachment bracket is an easy target for extreme damage on rough roads, (read - Australian roads off the bitumen). I can mount the dampener at almost 45 degrees but this severely reduces its efficiency towards the point of being useless. I could raise the frame by adding a 3 foot length of 2"x2"x1/8" RHS under the frame and fit the spring to the RHS but this also raises the height of the "A" frame on the car and the height of the door from the ground. Does anyone have any ideas to fit the dampeners at less than 45 degrees?
Hmmmm, decisions - decisions.

Kody
Never be afraid to ask questions here, Prov. 11:14