Ford960
Silver Member
Sounds like someone did a bandaid fix on that trailer and is trying to get rid of it. The thing to remember is that trailers aren't build out of high tech materials or heat treated to preclude doing weld repairs to the structure. The proper way to fix that trailer is to replace the entire beam that's bent and rewelded. Possibly replace both beams so that they are equal and the price would have to be right to cover the steel and labor.
Wish that I could find a trailer like this as I would fix it in a heart beat and tow it anywhere. Also if I were to fix it there wouldn't be an easy way to tell that a repair had been done.
The trailer may have been in an accident while loaded legally where the truck came to a sudden stop and the trailer momentum bent the hitch down tube and neck arms.
Wish that I could find a trailer like this as I would fix it in a heart beat and tow it anywhere. Also if I were to fix it there wouldn't be an easy way to tell that a repair had been done.
The trailer may have been in an accident while loaded legally where the truck came to a sudden stop and the trailer momentum bent the hitch down tube and neck arms.