I'm mentally going through the free-body diagram of the axles under braking forces, and I see where Dexter and Alko get their answer.
The front axle spring is fixed at the front of the spring. This is the pivot point for the spring; the spring can move up or down as well as laterally at the rear of the spring. When that axle brakes, the friction between the tire and the road exerts a torque on the axle, from both the direct braking torque and the torque that comes from the force of the tire on the road multiplied by the perpendicular distance from that force to the pivot point. Both of these torques make the axle tend to pivot...upwards off the ground.
The reverse is true on the rear axle. The torque acts in the same relative direction as the torque on the front axle, but the spring is fixed on the rear and free to move upwards or down at the forward end of the spring. The axle will be force downward. If the equalizer didn't stop the spring, in fact the axle could even ride under the spring pivot point and flip....
Nevertheless, I will eventually put brakes on both axles of my flatbed trailer.
edit: I see Skyco also explaine dthis at the same time I was typing. Goes to show great minds must think alike![]()
Funny- the Whaler site shows torsion axles.
If they are equalized leaf springs and the brakes are on the front only they are built wrong.
I agree with you on the not all loads needing brakes, but I disagree on the importance of different equalizers (as long as the front and back arms are the same length), as I understand it (and someone correct me if I missed something) if a trailer has dual axles with leaf springs and an equalizer between them, the weight on both axles will the the same when the trailer is loaded and stopped, if there is more weight on the front the front axle will be pushed down more than the back, this will cause the front spring to push up on the front of the equalizer which will push down on the back of the equalizer, causing the back spring (and by extension the back axle) to take an equal share of the weight, this continues until you run out of travel on the equalizer at which point the load becomes unbalanced.Skyco,
I was trying to make a point that not all trailers are built the same, not all trailers use the same equalizers, and not all loads require dual axle brakes.
I agree with you on the not all loads needing brakes, but I disagree on the importance of different equalizers (as long as the front and back arms are the same length), as I understand it (and someone correct me if I missed something) if a trailer has dual axles with leaf springs and an equalizer between them, the weight on both axles will the the same when the trailer is loaded and stopped, if there is more weight on the front the front axle will be pushed down more than the back, this will cause the front spring to push up on the front of the equalizer which will push down on the back of the equalizer, causing the back spring (and by extension the back axle) to take an equal share of the weight, this continues until you run out of travel on the equalizer at which point the load becomes unbalanced.
Attached is a diagram of a dual axle trailer at rest, with front brakes applied and with rear brakes applied, it shows the forces applied to the equalizer and the result of said forces.
View attachment 126079
.
Aaron Z
I agree with you on the not all loads needing brakes, but I disagree on the importance of different equalizers (as long as the front and back arms are the same length), as I understand it (and someone correct me if I missed something) if a trailer has dual axles with leaf springs and an equalizer between them, the weight on both axles will the the same when the trailer is loaded and stopped, if there is more weight on the front the front axle will be pushed down more than the back, this will cause the front spring to push up on the front of the equalizer which will push down on the back of the equalizer, causing the back spring (and by extension the back axle) to take an equal share of the weight, this continues until you run out of travel on the equalizer at which point the load becomes unbalanced.
Attached is a diagram of a dual axle trailer at rest, with front brakes applied and with rear brakes applied, it shows the forces applied to the equalizer and the result of said forces.
View attachment 126079
Aaron Z