TacomaJD
I LIKE CHEAP STUFF.....
As soon as it is financially wise for me to make the move, I want an enclosed trailer to haul my rig in and start camping in. Think my rig is like 13-14' long tip to tip, so a 24'-26' would be plenty for me. I then of course, would sell my 18' all metal car hauler to comp some of the costs of the enclosed. My car hauler has dual 3500# axles with one braking axle, which seems to be more than enough for what I haul, which is only my rig, (estimated 4500#, plus probably 2500 approximate pounds of trailer. So I am flipping through enclosed trailers on craigslist and the ones in the $4k range mostly have the same dual 3500# axles under it, but both are braking axles on some which is good. But I figured they would have heavier axles in such a big trailer?
Say by the time I have my rig in it, bunch of tools, camping gear, maybe build a pretty solid built work bench/storage area out of wood, mount generator on front, and just fill it full of whatever junk I need when I go wheeling (spare 39" and trailer tire(s), extra propane tanks, heater) do you think that would be pushing the limit of the dual 3500# axles? I mean what is the realistic safe operating weight capacity of a dual 3500# axle trailer?
Something like this is what I've been looking at, they are around $4,000-$4,500
http://bham.craigslist.org/hvd/4796670904.html
Then it looks like the ones with 5200# axles are around $5650 like this one
http://nashville.craigslist.org/bfd/4788311699.html
Then the 7000# version is roughly $6300
http://bham.craigslist.org/hvd/4790524133.html
And I'm also questioning how good my ole 2500hd 6.0L gasser will pull a loaded enclosed! Ultimately I want to get to where I have a decent way of camping when I go wheeling. So far, that could be done best by enclosed trailer, or other and less luxurious options include buying a camper top for my truck or a 3/4 ton suburban to camp in. A slide-in truck camper isn't really an option because a nice one is so damn expensive for how small the bastards are and I really don't want to fawk with loading one up and chaining it down every time I want to camp.
Say by the time I have my rig in it, bunch of tools, camping gear, maybe build a pretty solid built work bench/storage area out of wood, mount generator on front, and just fill it full of whatever junk I need when I go wheeling (spare 39" and trailer tire(s), extra propane tanks, heater) do you think that would be pushing the limit of the dual 3500# axles? I mean what is the realistic safe operating weight capacity of a dual 3500# axle trailer?
Something like this is what I've been looking at, they are around $4,000-$4,500
http://bham.craigslist.org/hvd/4796670904.html
Then it looks like the ones with 5200# axles are around $5650 like this one
http://nashville.craigslist.org/bfd/4788311699.html
Then the 7000# version is roughly $6300
http://bham.craigslist.org/hvd/4790524133.html
And I'm also questioning how good my ole 2500hd 6.0L gasser will pull a loaded enclosed! Ultimately I want to get to where I have a decent way of camping when I go wheeling. So far, that could be done best by enclosed trailer, or other and less luxurious options include buying a camper top for my truck or a 3/4 ton suburban to camp in. A slide-in truck camper isn't really an option because a nice one is so damn expensive for how small the bastards are and I really don't want to fawk with loading one up and chaining it down every time I want to camp.