Ign
Well-known member
I had previously posted about a Hot Deal on these trailers. In fact, the deal was barely lukewarm but one user had mentioned he might want to see what mods I had planned so here's a start.
Will update more later.
Nothing here is groundbreaking fab, so if you have anything better to do with your time, perhaps better to do that.
I'll start with my single most pet-peeve on light duty trailers: the spring plates. They're ****** and unsafe.
Better plates on trucks and larger trailers are formed with BENDS in them so that when your u-bolts effectively act like a fine thread press the plates don't just curl around the leaf spring.
Option 2 is the bigger hammer method: in crudest terms usually anything thicker or bigger is stronger. Since I had some 1/2" flat bar just clogging the shop floor I used option 2
You can see in the "before" pic one plate was already bending. You can't achieve anything resembling a torque value if other parts of your assembly yield first....
Fortunately in my case the stock u-bolts had enough length to accommodate my thicker plates
Will update more later.
Nothing here is groundbreaking fab, so if you have anything better to do with your time, perhaps better to do that.
I'll start with my single most pet-peeve on light duty trailers: the spring plates. They're ****** and unsafe.
Better plates on trucks and larger trailers are formed with BENDS in them so that when your u-bolts effectively act like a fine thread press the plates don't just curl around the leaf spring.
Option 2 is the bigger hammer method: in crudest terms usually anything thicker or bigger is stronger. Since I had some 1/2" flat bar just clogging the shop floor I used option 2
You can see in the "before" pic one plate was already bending. You can't achieve anything resembling a torque value if other parts of your assembly yield first....
Fortunately in my case the stock u-bolts had enough length to accommodate my thicker plates