
Originally Posted by
pfillery
So are there particular specs for Qld and where can these be found? I had heard that the axle had to be in the centre of the "box" part of the trailer, this is the reason a lot of tub to trailer conversions have a tool box on the front, and yet a lot of boat trailers have the wheels towards the back end.
Also what is the consensus on drawbars? One up the middle with some supports like the army trailers or an A frame? Are there any advantages to either system apart from amounts of work and steel required?
The national trailer design specs call for the wheels on box trailers to be not further forward than the centre of the box - hence the tool boxes in front, these are counted as part of the box. The idea of this is to ensure that the towbar always has positive download. Boat trailers can often have the wheels well towards the back without excessive download for two reasons - the boat often overhangs the rear of the trailer, and if the boat is an outboard one, its centre of gravity is well back due to the heavy motor.
For a light trailer, I would only use an A frame, as this will give the best strength/weight ratio. However unless you are really trying to reduce weight, the difference will not be all that significant.
John
John
JDNSW
1986 110 County 3.9 diesel
1970 2a 109 2.25 petrol
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