The Silver Streak E-mail ListArchive Files[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [SilverStreak] Flipped axels (again)
Curt, Ok, come do mine! Most axles I have seen bow up to the center. Sets the camber. Makes it track. I do not know of any axle that can be 180 flipped because of that. Of course if drop axles flipping is out of the question. I do have experience overloading my single axle tilt trailer for carrying scissor lifts. On the order of a oversized golf cart type trailer, I put two scissor lifts on it one time. Wrong! 8000 pounds on a 4000 pound trailer was a big mistake. It squished the tires, towed 8 miles to my shop downtown whereupon I went over a swell. The over loaded trailer bottomed on the axles and the once bowed up axle bent down in the center, reversed the bow exactly, and the tires both cambered in toward the top. I unloaded. The trailer was rated properly and I assume the rating considers G-Force of the load during irregular road surfaces. I imagine the forces can double the weight on the trailer in those circumstances. This expensive industrial trailer was impossible to tow back empty to my north yard at any speed above 20 mph without severe duck-walking. I was able to re-bow this very strong axle, return the camber to bottoms in toward center and it resumed good towing. Loaded, the camber tends to have only a slight inner bottom camber which can flex to vertical camber. I do know the wheels cannot be bowed in toward the top and be towed. They look vertical but actually have a slight camber in to the bottom. So your right, the axle can't be flipped. It does flex and move during use and needs the slight arch. -Eddie- Houston, TX
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