Defender Chassis
Well-known member
So morons like you don't get screwed.
How was that not a reasonable question? Why is your response acceptable?
So morons like you don't get screwed.
SO, when did this enclosed CAR hauler turn into an enclosed RACE CAR hauler?Semantics
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Obviously, most race cars are going to be lighter.
That said, the vast majority of full size 4-door CARS these days tip the scales at more than 4k lbs.What do you think most people buy an enclosed trailer to haul? I am willing to bet it is not their daily driver. Do you own an enclosed trailer? The 73 Plymouth I listed came from the factory at 3400 lb. So, it is 400 lb lighter but it also has a full cage and a big block.
Not like it really matters. The trailer is rated to haul a vehicle of said weight, and the only way to get it in there is to drive up the door. Unlike your tailgate analogy, whereas any truck can be loaded without the use of the tailgate.
I see enclosed car trailers in 2 places. Race tracks and car shows. Lots of old cars at car shows. Lots of old cars are heavy.What do you think most people buy an enclosed trailer to haul? I am willing to bet it is not their daily driver. Do you own an enclosed trailer? The 73 Plymouth I listed came from the factory at 3400 lb. So, it is 400 lb lighter but it also has a full cage and a big block.
I see enclosed car trailers in 2 places. Race tracks and car shows. Lots of old cars at car shows. Lots of old cars are heavy.
I agree with you about all of it, but am really responding to the quoted part above...Why dont we start a poll of people with enclosed car trailers? Lets list the trailer size and capacity and then list the cars you regularly haul in your trailer. I will go 1st.
2001 Exiss Mach10 40' Gooseneck w/ twin 7k lb axles (5700lb empty)
#1: 225" Dragster, 1500lb
#2: 2000 EzGo Golf Cart, 650lb.
#3: 1995 Spitzer Jr. Dragster, 350lb.
1, 2 & 3 are currently hauled at the same time but not loaded simulltaneously.
#4: 1973 Plymouth Duster, 3000lb. (not raced for the last three seasons)
Bottom line is that there is NO reason to put such a door on a trailer of ANY kind, when the trailer is rated as such.
Many people use a trailer like this to haul motorcycles. I have seen similar trailers outfitted with fold down beds so once the cycles are unloaded the trailer can be used to camp. Before you get your ******* in a wad, I realize this is not OCG's intended use. My point is that some here think if the trailer is rated for 7k lb then the door should also be rated that high. That is not necessarily needed by all of those in the market for a piece of equipment of this type and if you want to eliminate the side cables then you obviously have to take a reduction in capacity of the door. I can see it as a desireable benefit to some."
Here's where I think you are clearly missing the point. I don't think anyone expects a trailer door that will hold 7k lbs...but they surely would expect it to hold more than 2,500lb. The trailer was sold as a "car hauler". Not a motorcycle hauler or cargo hauler or snowmobile hauler. The problem with the design on this car hauler is that it has the same door on it as those lesser haulers. Even CA's Gooseneck haulers have the same rated door. Do you truly believe it's appropriate to manufacture something that has components on it that the product description and generally accepted intended use will exceed the limitations of.
Does it really make sense to you that a person that buys a car hauler and only intends to use it to haul motorcycles or atv's gets the benefit of a product that will be over engineered for their application but a guy that buys a car hauler to actually haul cars gets the same door that is on the cargo and snowmobile trailer they offer?
Do you get to make your roll cage out of any size tube with any wall thickness you want? Do some cars not even require a roll cage? Why do you even need a roll cage it's not necessarily needed by everyone that races...only those who wreck.
Im going to go back on my word and once again respond in this thread.
Wouldnt a better analogy be:
"Yes sir the truck is rated for 4k lb but no sir you can not put all of it on the tailgate at one time."
What is your point? I said 4500 lb. Do many rock crawler enthusiasts use enclosed trailers? If so, what percentage of enclosed trailers are used by these people? Do you own an enclosed trailer for the expressed purpose of hauling your Mom's minivan? Your Ranger? I did not say there werent cars that do not weigh more than 4500 lb.
I will be going to the drag strip this weekend. I can not think of a single car that will participate outsdide of the street class that would comew close to 4500 lb. Let alone the ones that get towed in with enclosed trailers.
You guys are jumping on the bandwagon here and have no idea what the manufacturer actually did or did not do during the sale. This trailer obviously has a lite duty gate that some are suggesting should never be put on any trailer. This trailer is obviously made to fill a niche market (elimnation of cables on the ramp door) and with any design benefit there are compromises. For all anyone here knows the manufacturer could have warned the dealer and the dealer went forth with the sale. Some here would like ClasAct to come on here and defend themselves but nobody in there right mind would voluntarily take part in this lynch mob mentality. The fact is there is only one side of the story being portrayed here. I have nothing against OCG and have no connection to ClassAct.
BTW, I reserve the right to respond to any further antilogic.
Why dont we start a poll of people with enclosed car trailers? Lets list the trailer size and capacity and then list the cars you regularly haul in your trailer. I will go 1st.
2001 Exiss Mach10 40' Gooseneck w/ twin 7k lb axles (5700lb empty)
#1: 225" Dragster, 1500lb
#2: 2000 EzGo Golf Cart, 650lb.
#3: 1995 Spitzer Jr. Dragster, 350lb.
1, 2 & 3 are currently hauled at the same time but not loaded simulltaneously.
#4: 1973 Plymouth Duster, 3000lb. (not raced for the last three seasons)
Like you said, who are you to make that determination? I can think of many reasons to have a door of this type. To elimnate the side cables and use hinge mounted torsion springs the door will have to be lightened. If not, all trailer amnufacturers would be doing it. Many people use a trailer like this to haul motorcycles. I have seen similar trailers outfitted with fold down beds so once the cycles are unloaded the trailer can be used to camp. Before you get your ******* in a wad, I realize this is not OCG's intended use. My point is that some here think if the trailer is rated for 7k lb then the door should also be rated that high. That is not necessarily needed by all of those in the market for a piece of equipment of this type and if you want to eliminate the side cables then you obviously have to take a reduction in capacity of the door. I can see it as a desireable benefit to some. I have foam padding I install on my cables so people do not run into them. They do get in the way quite often.
BTW, I didnt say the tailgate analogy was perfect, only that it was more valid that what was proposed. If fact though, what about some of the recent super pickups made by Sterling and International? They obviosly have way more capacity that the bed they install can handle. This is because they are made to pull a trailer also. Does this mean they should not be built? Just because they will not work for everyone does not mean they are not perfectly acceptable by others.
... In my opinion, Class Act will not survive in any business world. Let alone today's environment...
Some here would like ClasAct to come on here and defend themselves but nobody in there right mind would voluntarily take part in this lynch mob mentality. The fact is there is only one side of the story being portrayed here. I have nothing against OCG and have no connection to ClassAct.
BTW, I reserve the right to respond to any further antilogic.

So morons like you don't get screwed.

what's so special about this one other than an excessive amount of boring responses?![]()



ps-anybody here other than Nissan Crawler know what "Wenzel" means? LOL
thats a 10-4 big guy........................togtfo hahahha............

I do.And the basis for your moronic response is? So he got a bad trailer....get over it; there are tons of bad deals and they don't get stickies....what's so special about this one other than an excessive amount of boring responses?![]()
"That is not necessarily needed by all of those in the market for a piece of equipment of this type and if you want to eliminate the side cables then you obviously have to take a reduction in capacity of the door"
So you are saying that NO door/ramp built without cables could have been built strong enough? Pretty broad generalization, I would say, especially since the trailer seems to have been specified to meet his requirments. Again, it would seem the manufacturer would have been the first to address his specifications, IF they knew that a cableless door/ramp would not meet the requirement.
The whole purpose of a torsion design is to eliminate the need for cables, or is it only for aiding in the lifting of the door/ramp?
It appears to me that he greatly increased the integrity of the ramp by adding the 2 X 8 boards as stiffeners to spread the load.
And the basis for your moronic response is? So he got a bad trailer....get over it; there are tons of bad deals and they don't get stickies....what's so special about this one other than an excessive amount of boring responses?![]()
Get over it? I dunno OCG, maybe you should just do as this guy says and just get over it.
If you really need me to explain WHY the thread is stickied, I've proved that you really are a ***** who obviously has too much money to worry about getting a bum trailer, heck..you'll just get over it, right?
The only boring response in this thread is yours.
I any event hopefully this thread will help others from purchasing a Car Hauler that the manufacturer meant to haul ATV’s and Motorcycles.
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Defender, if you had a car like OCG posted, would you haul it on an open trailer?
Defender, if you had a car like OCG posted, would you haul it on an open trailer?
"That is not necessarily needed by all of those in the market for a piece of equipment of this type and if you want to eliminate the side cables then you obviously have to take a reduction in capacity of the door"
So you are saying that NO door/ramp built without cables could have been built strong enough? Pretty broad generalization, I would say, especially since the trailer seems to have been specified to meet his requirments. Again, it would seem the manufacturer would have been the first to address his specifications, IF they knew that a cableless door/ramp would not meet the requirement.
The whole purpose of a torsion design is to eliminate the need for cables, or is it only for aiding in the lifting of the door/ramp?
It appears to me that he greatly increased the integrity of the ramp by adding the 2 X 8 boards as stiffeners to spread the load.
As I see it OCG's argument is twofold:
1: This trailer should never have been built and has no real world value as constructed.
2: The manufacturer and dealer knew what I wanted and sold me something that would never hold up for my intended use.
#1 does not hold water in my opinion. Even if my previous prediction that this trailer would be fine for 95% of those with an enclosed trailer was only actually 50%, that would still more than prove my point. An Ariel Atom does not fit the need of most motorists but that does not mean they should not be built.
#2 has more merit. I find it hard to believe the manufacturer would stick their neck out for a single sale. It just does not make sence. I do believe that a dealer who works on commision and may be selling stereos at Best Buy next week would have little apprehension in doing the same thing though. OCG has never stated, let alone presented proof, that the manufacturer knew the intended application. I may be proven wrong on this but until OCG even suggests the manufacturer actually knew that JTI was selling their trailer for the wrong application then I think the manufacturer should be given the benefit of the doubt. There are a lot of possibilities as to what happened to cause this issue. If it turns out that ClassAct knew about the misapplication of their product and they approved or even failed to object then shame on them.
Whether OCG can build a new door or build a new trailer is NOT THE POINT.He was sold a defective product,and the Mfg. should make good on it!
Yes, but they don't market the Ariel Atom as a 1-ton truck either, now do they?
Class act markets it as a car hauling trailer, with a capacity of 7500#'s (IIRC), but yet you can't bring a 7500# vehicle into the trailer.
Now, if class act marketed it as a car hauling trailer with a capacity of 7500#s, but only good for a 4,500# car, and 3,000#'s of cargo, but only loading 2,500#'s max of cargo at a time, you might have a point. See how dumb it sounds to say it, let alone market a trailer with those stipulations?
Comparing people with drag cars as part of a normal use of a trailer is ridiculous. The vast majority of people are not putting light weight, stripped cars into these trailers.
how many times can you step on a 1x6 four feet long held up at each end before it snaps.... i am sure i could many times....but eventually it will failHow so? The door was labled for 2500/2000 lbs. He routinely overloaded it for 2 years without a failure. Only when he really way overloaded it did it fail.
how many times can you step on a 1x6 four feet long held up at each end before it snaps.... i am sure i could many times....but eventually it will fail
How so? The door was labled for 2500/2000 lbs. He routinely overloaded it for 2 years without a failure. Only when he really way overloaded it did it fail.
How so? The door was labled for 2500/2000 lbs. He routinely overloaded it for 2 years without a failure. Only when he really way overloaded it did it fail.
BTW, I do not find it totally off base for ClassAct to not talk with a customer in this kind of case. That is what the dealer network is for. JTI should be bending over backwards to get this sorted out. In fact, I think they should resolve it even if ClassAct is giving them the same treatment they are giving OCG. If ClassAct is at fault and JTI has to eat the resolution then JTI should stop representing the product.
Junkman,
OCG did eventually find the (tiny) labels on the door of his trailer. He was fully honest about that disclosure and identified it above. The label was tiny and inappropriately placed if it was intended to be a warning disclosure. Even after OCG posted numerous, clear pictures of the door on this board, none of the hawks on here found the labels.
I'm not providing a legal opinion here, but rather a common sense opinion. I'm going to take OCG at his word that he had discussions with Class Act regarding his needs. I haven't yet seen a reason to doubt OCG's integrity, and I suspect that some of the posters on here are shills for Class Act (I'm looking at you, NewCarGuy). OCG's representations that he spoke with his dealer and conveyed his needs to Class Act seem to be confirmed by the fact hat Class Act built him a custom trailer--they changed the fenders, lengthened the doors, etc. They deviated from their standard production trailer to make a custom model for OCG. That much seems uncontested.
Also, OCG requested a longer door, and Class Act refused, claiming that they could not make a longer door that was strong enough. From a common sense basis, that seems to imply that Class Act indicated this door length and configuration was strong enough for OCG's needs.
If this was an 'off the lot' trailer, and neither OCG nor his dealer had any interaction with Class Act regarding its configuration, then I would agree...OCG should be talking to his dealer. (In the end, I'm not sure if OCG will get satisfaction from Class Act and he may end up talking to his dealer). But in this case, the manufacturer made a specific, modified, tailored product to meet OCG's needs. They refused to make certain changes (lengthening the door even more), because the acknowledged that with those changes, it would not be structurally sound. I don't think that placing a relatively hidden 'warning' label on the door somehow eliminates all of Class Act's liability here. I tend to think that Class Act's conduct in building this specific, modified trailer for OCG likely falls into the 'warranty of fitness for a particular purpose' realm, were Class Act built a trailer that should have performed for OCG's needs. But I'm certain that OCG's attorney is talking to him about that.
Also, I think we have to acknowledge that different users of trailers have different purposes. Certainly some would use a trailer like this to transport a large number of ATVs, never loading the door beyond 2500#. Some may use it for lightweight drag cars and large numbers of tools. But I don't think it is beyond the realm of reason to suspect that many would use a car hauler trailer to haul cars. And while there are some deviations in weight between OCG's antiques and some modern cars, there are a lot of automotive enthusiasts whose cars would weigh as much or more than OCG's units. As a matter of common sense (and different people may think differently about this), it seems to me that if you have a trailer with XXXX# capacity and only one primary access door, and if the access door comes down and is intended to be used as a ramp, that access door should be capable of handling whatever weight the trailer is capable of handling (even if we're talking about net cargo weight and not gross vehicle weight), plus a healthy margin of safety. I'm surprised that this is such a contentious issue, and that there are those who post on here expecting that a trailer with a 5,000# capacity would have a ramp only capable of handling 500# (figures obviously changed to emphasize the point).
At the end of the day, I think the labels are relatively irrelevant. Labels are only effective if they are visible and actually serve to warn the user of a product; these are not and did not. I think the most compelling part of this story is that OCG ordered a custom product for a specific purpose. Class Act built it to his needs, and even refused to make certain changes because of the limits of their trailer (i.e. the lengthened the door, but not as much as OCG requested). OCG experienced concerns with the trailer (with the door bowing under load) and was advised that this was 'normal' and 'to be expected'. And ultimately, the door failed under load, when OCG was attempting to do something that seems relatively reasonable: he was attempting to drive a car, whose gross weight is far less than the design and legal payload of the Class Act trailer, into his car hauler.

Junkman,
.... If this was an 'off the lot' trailer, and neither OCG nor his dealer had any interaction with Class Act regarding its configuration, then I would agree...OCG should be talking to his dealer. (In the end, I'm not sure if OCG will get satisfaction from Class Act and he may end up talking to his dealer). But in this case, the manufacturer made a specific, modified, tailored product to meet OCG's needs. They refused to make certain changes (lengthening the door even more), because the acknowledged that with those changes, it would not be structurally sound. I don't think that placing a relatively hidden 'warning' label on the door somehow eliminates all of Class Act's liability here. I tend to think that Class Act's conduct in building this specific, modified trailer for OCG likely falls into the 'warranty of fitness for a particular purpose' realm, were Class Act built a trailer that should have performed for OCG's needs. But I'm certain that OCG's attorney is talking to him about that.
Also, I think we have to acknowledge that different users of trailers have different purposes. Certainly some would use a trailer like this to transport a large number of ATVs, never loading the door beyond 2500#. Some may use it for lightweight drag cars and large numbers of tools. But I don't think it is beyond the realm of reason to suspect that many would use a car hauler trailer to haul cars. And while there are some deviations in weight between OCG's antiques and some modern cars, there are a lot of automotive enthusiasts whose cars would weigh as much or more than OCG's units. As a matter of common sense (and different people may think differently about this), it seems to me that if you have a trailer with XXXX# capacity and only one primary access door, and if the access door comes down and is intended to be used as a ramp, that access door should be capable of handling whatever weight the trailer is capable of handling (even if we're talking about net cargo weight and not gross vehicle weight), plus a healthy margin of safety. I'm surprised that this is such a contentious issue, and that there are those who post on here expecting that a trailer with a 5,000# capacity would have a ramp only capable of handling 500# (figures obviously changed to emphasize the point).
At the end of the day, I think the labels are relatively irrelevant. Labels are only effective if they are visible and actually serve to warn the user of a product; these are not and did not. I think the most compelling part of this story is that OCG ordered a custom product for a specific purpose. Class Act built it to his needs, and even refused to make certain changes because of the limits of their trailer (i.e. the lengthened the door, but not as much as OCG requested). OCG experienced concerns with the trailer (with the door bowing under load) and was advised that this was 'normal' and 'to be expected'. And ultimately, the door failed under load, when OCG was attempting to do something that seems relatively reasonable: he was attempting to drive a car, whose gross weight is far less than the design and legal payload of the Class Act trailer, into his car hauler.
Now here's a member that understands the situation and rightfully addresses the issues.![]()
Old Car Guy is the injured party in this situation, and had Class Act properly resolved this issue in a timely and responsible manner, this thread would not exist. I can certainly sympathize with OCG and I have become increasingly surprised that the manufacturer has essentially told him to go blow smoke. Any decline in business that results from their behavior would appear to be well deserved. I would never consider doing business with them.
