As above. Classic fatigue failure, probably resulting from what could be described as a "machining error" leaving an unintended stress raiser. But most likely in reality the result of chronic overloading where either the trailer was consistently overloaded or the axle was undersized.
This type of trailer axle is not intended to be sufficiently heavily loaded that likely machining marks would be a sufficient stress raiser to initiate failure. Of course, there is the possibility that there was a stress raiser that was sufficient introduced by damage to the axle after machining. This could possibly have been from road damage, although the pictures do not make it clear where the break is on the axle. Similarly, it could be the result from welding making a stress raiser.
There is a slight possibility that the stress raiser was an irregularity in steel composition, but there is no indication of this in the pictures, which strongly suggest the stress raiser was at the surface - and note that there is what looks like a machining mark a few millimetres along the axle from the break, and this is the sort of mark that could have started the failure.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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