radman
Gold Member
- Joined
- Nov 7, 2000
- Messages
- 320
- Tractor
- Kubota L3710, JD5300, AC D19, IH 806, IH 8950, Ford 8N, Farmal Super M, several others in the past.
It would be helpful to know your intended purpose. I have multiple trailers for different reasons and convenience. I currently have a 30' titan gooseneck dual tandem axle (25K), moveable beaver tail, pull out ramps; a H&H 24' electric tilt bed (14K); a titan 14' dump trailer (14K), electric lift, with pull out ramps; a H&H 18' enclosed cargo trailer (7K), and an H&H 5x10 tilt bed (3.5K). The 24' tilt is used the most and probably the handiest for east loading. I don't believe anyone manufacturer is the best. Compare quality and construction and most will be in a similar price range. Most I bought used and were in very good condition. If you are not in a hurry, you can find good used ones but sometimes used equal abused or they want near new prices. Prices of trailers have gone up significantly in the past 1-2 years due to steel increases. I bought a new 20' H&H skidsteer trailer last year and 1 month later decided to get the 24' tilt bed. The dealer gave me what I paid for the trailer on trade-in for the 20' because the new trailers went up $500.
For most people on this board, a 16-18' trailer with 7-10K capacity would satisfy most general hauling needs. The longer and heavier trailers are always my preference. A 2-4' longer trailer doesn't add much more to the price. Some of my trailers have torsion axles instead of leaf-spring and I feel the ride is much smoother on the heavier axle trailers with torsion axles. Watch out for the crossmembers between the frame. They vary from angle iron to channel iron and spacings vary from 12" to 24". This is where construction often differs. The frame thickness, crossmembers, axle capacity, length, ramp types and options drive the different prices. Radials ride smoother than bias.
For most people on this board, a 16-18' trailer with 7-10K capacity would satisfy most general hauling needs. The longer and heavier trailers are always my preference. A 2-4' longer trailer doesn't add much more to the price. Some of my trailers have torsion axles instead of leaf-spring and I feel the ride is much smoother on the heavier axle trailers with torsion axles. Watch out for the crossmembers between the frame. They vary from angle iron to channel iron and spacings vary from 12" to 24". This is where construction often differs. The frame thickness, crossmembers, axle capacity, length, ramp types and options drive the different prices. Radials ride smoother than bias.