lmalcomb
Well-known member
How did you apply the Hurculiner brush, roller, spray?
Is it a flat, semi gloss, or gloss finish?
Is it a flat, semi gloss, or gloss finish?
How did you apply the Hurculiner brush, roller, spray?
Is it a flat, semi gloss, or gloss finish?
Used the rollers that were supplied in the kit, along with the brush for tight areas. I would call it a semi gloss, tomorrow i will ad the uv protectant and see what that does to it.
That sounds great. After reading up on the kit I still did not see where the uv protection was included. I read some reviews that said it made a big difference as far as preventing fading. Keep us updated.
This could be my ignorance, however I was told the trailer was built that way? I thought it was kinda odd, but took the guy for his word.( it does have a slight curve to it) Also I figured anything I put on it should not stress it too bad. Do you have a pic of the thing you do to straighten them?
I picked up the trailer for 800, the herculiner was just one gallon for about 85, two fenders 65 each, wood will cost 180 after taxes, and i have sealer here left over. The thing that i was a little stunned with price on was 210 for sand blasting. All said in done it will be about 1500 without a winch.
Kind of curious why you didn't straighten the frame before you put all this work into it. When we repair this type of trailer we line up the side rails and then put in a piece of tube steel above the axles to stiffen up the frame.
How would you straighten it?
Hello,
You will want to close in the back (inboard) side of the fender. You will be amazed at how beat up the side of a load will get in a short ride!
How's the bedliner holding up??
Capt. Chrysler
Hello,
You will want to close in the back (inboard) side of the fender. You will be amazed at how beat up the side of a load will get in a short ride!
How's the bedliner holding up??
Capt. Chrysler
What are you using for the back of the fenders? Around here, the sheet steel is 18 gauge. Its not adding anything to the strength of the trailer.
If you want to increase the overall strength of the trailer with out much weight, add a top rail. Like what you see in my avitar, but much shorter.
As for over springing, the only time I see this issue is when someone recycles trailer house axles and springs. Those springs won't even start to flex until you get 10k lbs on them. Never a good thing to do unless you have built the entire trailer to haul that much weight.
I agree, the fender backing looks nice, but it doesn't do much, so I never install it and try to talk my customers out of it.
Good idea , those straps have a huge metal connecting point and its around the bottom lip of the trailer. I would think the straps wouldnt work with D rings, should I be using chains?
I use 16 gauge [1.6mm] which is the same thickness as the fenders [imported from the USA]
18 gauge would also contribute to the beaming strength also, ONLY IF it was fitted correctly to prevent buckling on the compression side [lower edge]
You need to picture a fender with backs as similar to a piece of angle [ the top of the fender and the back are at 90° to each other ]
The top edge is under tension ,and the lower edge is under compression so either the top will try to stretch or the lower would try to buckle.
If the lower edge had a 90° flange it wont buckle [ so this is where the deck of the trailer comes in handy ]
I literally bond the whole back to the trailer using urethane adhesive and pop rivets every 6” [ the rivets only hold the backs until the urethane cures ]
If you had a spot weld [ 1/4” Rosette weld ] every 2” on a 72” fender, the total area of the 37 welds is 1.81 In² . Spot welds will also allow the backs to buckle between them.
A 3/4” strip x 72” of urethane adhesive has the surface area of 54 In². Now the Deck-Backs-Fender are “Z” shaped.
A common method of adding beaming strength is the cutback tongue [on car haulers] where an upper rail is undesirable.
If I were to add an upper rail on a utility trailer, I would [and do] literally fold up the whole side out of 14 gauge [2mm]
Here is a pic of a car hauler I built for a friend which is grossly overloaded . The trailer was made from 1/8 tube [3mm], The tongue is pivoting to allow it to tilt [so it isn’t welded to the deck ]
The overall weight is 1496 lbs [680kg]. It has not bent or had any buckles in the fender backs.
The other pic is a 10 x 5 utility trailer built from 14 gauge , the visible sides are the actual chassis and are folded into a “U” shaped channel on the upper and lower edges
It is basically a monocoque tub with cantilever posts on the corners [ it is very stiff and lightweight ] The biggest issue I had was getting springs rated low enough
With engineering “Shape is more important than size” , so try not to fall into the Cowshed Engineering trap of adding more and more **** until it looks strong enough
I'm not buying you math. I don't care if you weld every cm of the perimiter and have brakes at the bottom. If the trailer is overloaded, you will distort the sheet steel or pop the welds. One of the second reasons I don't do the backs is because "call backs" are killers. I can't afford to fix things that I told the customer they would not be happy with. They all want it for free.
I'm only suggesting that I don't want the fender backings. I want, and know a steel car hauling trailer will flex. I expect it and know the flex will not hurt anything. If you want the fender backs, put them on. As for debriese entering from the open backs, yes, it will happen. Around here, your tow vehicle will kick up much more road debries than what will come from the sides. If it that much of a conscern, you should really think about a covered trailer.
Your other trailer designs are very nice. That bent sheet steel will make for a very rigid trailer. I don't have a brake at my disposal, so I'm forced to do frame trailers. I'm sure the cost comes down using your style as well.
I use both.
I like chains in the front and 4" winch straps in the back. Most of the straps have a hook on the end for latching onto the "D" rings.
You should be using axle straps, wich are just short web straps with hooks on both ends, to connect the straps too.
You should not be tieng down the body of the car, either. Tie down axles and let the springs and shocks of the car "float" the body. You will have a much better ride and you don't have to worry about the straps and chains loosening as the body of the car compresses the suspension going over bumps and dips.