chevy791979
Silver Member
This works very wellConsider hog or goat panels -- heavy wire mesh. Durable, easy to handle, probably lighter than lumber. I think the come in 16' lengths so you may get both sides out of one by cutting it in half.
This works very wellConsider hog or goat panels -- heavy wire mesh. Durable, easy to handle, probably lighter than lumber. I think the come in 16' lengths so you may get both sides out of one by cutting it in half.
Problem was it was getting dark, parked hooked up to trailer sitting on uneven ground, loaded it with wood. In the awkward position I was parked in, evidently we got too much weight on the tongue. Combine that with pulling out this position twisted the frame end down on one side. I did not notice until I got home and with a little more light, noticed one side of my rear bumper was sitting a couple inches low. Fortunately a trip to the dealerç—´ frame machine and $200 got it straightened out.That does not sound right, can you expand on this?
Problem was it was getting dark, parked hooked up to trailer sitting on uneven ground, loaded it with wood. In the awkward position I was parked in, evidently we got too much weight on the tongue. Combine that with pulling out this position twisted the frame end down on one side. I did not notice until I got home and with a little more light, noticed one side of my rear bumper was sitting a couple inches low. Fortunately a trip to the dealer痴 frame machine and $200 got it straightened out.
Sometimes you just get in too much of a hurry and wind up paying the price.
Receiver hitch, oem unit, bolted to frame.Did you have a receiver hitch or was the ball attached to the bumper itself?
Been almost too long to remember, but I think it had at least 3” of drop. Unloaded trailer would set reasonably level.Were you using a hitch insert that had a large amount of drop?
Sounds like you have a good plan. I would go for it and use hinges like you say. One more thing would be use a large diameter washer on the plywood side so it will not rip out so easy. Use some angle iron on the outside of the corners to help hold them together. Make sure you paint the plywood so it will not get wrecked as fastI have a 16' landscape utility trailer and I'm looking at building some short walls for it so I can use it to haul firewood. They need to be fairly easily removable as for most of my uses I wouldn't want them on it.
Looking at weights of a cord of wood, seems like there's no point in going too high with the walls. It's a 7000# trailer and it weighs 1740#, so theoretically I can have about 5250# of payload. It'll probably be more like 5000# max once I factor in the weight of the walls, and I'd rather not max out the trailer either.
Anyway I'm debating how I should go about this. I had at one time considered using 2x12s to make a 24" high wall all around, but not only is that a fair amount of weight, but seems like I probably don't need to go a full 24" high. So I'm thinking about using 3/4" plywood and make it 16-20" high. The uprights on the rails are about 10" high. They already have holes that I can bolt to. I'm thinking maybe for the sides, I could have two 8' lengths 16-20" high, connected by hinges to hold them together and so I can fold it up when not in use. Carriage bolts through the plywood and the uprights on the existing rail. In the front corners I could either bolt through a piece of 4x4 to lock them together or maybe some sort of latch for easier disassembly, less space and lighter weight.
I'm just throwing around ideas right now. Anyone have any thoughts about how to do this better?
Thanks
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