Always handy havin a trailer, especially one u built yourself because your more likely to take care of it. Made mine 35 yrs ago and it's still working well. Nice work.
As you don't have a new post today I came back to this one as It is a thing I have done many times. Love that cut where Cora comes to you in the bush. She really lives the life of Riley. I sure enjoy a build done by a good machinist / fabricator. Accuracy can never be not considered in anything. See you next week my friend. (I hope).
Nice job. I try to make the tongues as long as possible. Makes it so much easier to control when backing up. Otherwise they will jack knife very quickly. Also, I would add some side supports for that light weight tongue. Just me. Thanks for sharing.
Nice build Steve I think you are building it for your buddy that's been helping you aquire equipment at auctions. He should get a lot of use out of it. Cora is such a sweet dog she is so lucky she found you guys. Thanks for the video.
Just like a sawmill trailers for HD applications like this just can't be overbuilt. Oh how I love fixtures and jigs. Well worth the time and resorses to make them. I am thinking you really appreciate that wonderful flat and level pour you did on the shop resto. I will never forget all the different things you mastered when breathing the new life into that building. BTW You have some great tunes happening here today. So good I put them up into the TV and surround sound. I once had a pad ground into our long shop floor to give me a dialable surface to work on. The boss squalled like a rabbet but when I showed/ compared it to what I was spending hourly to get a good, level build he was sold. The pad was 12 x 40 so I could cut damaged logging trailers apart and back together again. Being old school I was never a fan of wire feed welders. The wire tech was new and solid low hydrogen wires had yet to be invented. Things have changed a lot since my retirement. It is nice to see welds done in the right direction esp with the spring hangers. Many will make the mistake of welding across A beam whether it is H or SQ tube. when they crack they become really dangerous to everyone on the road. I usually put a side gusset in both sides of the tow bar. About a 1/3rd of the length for that extra bit of over build on a trailer draw bar. That way it makes a great support system for a tool box or the spare tire. Just like everything like a shop we can't make anything big enough eh. Thanks bud and I will see you next post my friend.
Everybody worried about the dog. The dog, just like mine, has probably grown up in the shop and has been told countless times when to exit. Sure she knows by now
Happy Sunday Steve, Cora, and Grits! Nice change of pace, a little fabricating is good for us. I learned about notching beams on the Evo Saw ( I have one ) Instructive and inspiring as always. Thanks for sharing, God Bless.
Nice trailer build, Steve. Keeping it square, parallel, and flat is critical. Notching and welding the i beams to the web makes it really strong. Great informative video. Thanks for sharing.
Steve, in Australia, your draw bar would be classed as very light duty,,we normally have a V style draw bar, and axle is always to the rear of center to get weight on the ball ,,Regards Frank.
I enjoy watching people carefully plan, 3d model, and execute a project. But I REALLY like watching somebody with deep experience using expert intuition and past lessons to design and build something on the fly. The "plan-model-build" feels like something I can do (probably unjustified ego, but that's how it feels), this feels more like watching somebody who's mastered a domain.
Nice job. Welds look very nice. Really a nice to see Miss Elizabeth doing work on her truck. Was in Kansas visiting my son, nice to get away, but no place like home, and watching you n yours Saturday morning. Thanks as always. Steve in the morning, Adam in the afternoon. He told me about your channel years ago n have been hooked ever since. Thanks again for all you do. Learning and enjoying, couldn't ask for anything more. Have a great weekend. 👍
That is one serious heavy-duty trailer frame for its size. You could put a 5k axle under that thing. Anything worth engineering is worth over engineering.
Hi Steve. Love the dry humor at the beginning! As far as being overbuilt, Tom Lipton often says "nothing too strong ever broke". I tend to agree with that. Nice trailer. Al should get some good use out of it. Thanks for the video!
That was really fun to watch, especially the plasma torch. I had to look away when you removed those steel scraps from the bandsaw with your fingers, but I know you are very skilled and careful.
@@PhillipRogers-e3k go back and watch the video at the time he marked. The dog was looking directly at the weld. Dogs aren't smart enough to protect their eyes so the owner must protect them. God bless you!
When I was building trailers, of all sorts, the basic rule of thumb was for the centre of axle, or axle group, was to be 4 inches (100mm) BEHIND the centre of the bed/box. That plus drawbar/tongue weight gave enough balance to track near perfect.
Not saying your wrong but a guy that built and installed trailer equipment said put the axle at 60 to 65 percent of the length and it would give good tongue weight and track better going down the road my best friend has a car hauling trailer built with the axle in the middle and it pulls good when it is unhooked if you sit down on the front it will drop and scare the hell out of you and you have
Awesome looking trailer. Being it's so small hopefully it will handle just fine.. But the load thats placed upon it, the c.o.g. has to be slightly in front of the center line of the trailers axle to pull correctly.
Nice job using C sections and I beem will never bend or break ? As for the axl should be 100 150 mm of center to the back of trailer . As for that tow pull and hitch as its called here in Australia that one i would chuck in bin and make a heavy duty one to match your work . And as a I ways the weakest link is the tires are they rated to carry 1000 pound each ?
I seen a video once of this guy letting his dog bite at the grinder sparks. Pissed me off to no end. The first thing I thought of was it’s not funny that dogs gonna have metal in his mouth and in his eyes for the rest of his life.
Clamping on heavy sawhorses with metal f clamps and chucking a bit of 3mm angle with c clamps across on each 4 corners help to keep em square 2 while you weld it up, in my experience
Pro Tip: If you use Vise Grips on both sides of the Fireball squares to hold your work in place, there's no monkeying around with them. They'll hold things square without shifting.
Awesome job. It would have been better if you made it a bit bigger though. I know you built it for one specific purpose, but you built it well, and it will be around for a while, and I was just thinking that later in its life it could be a quad trailer.
Thanks for making the video.... 1) Make sure your dog is out of the way - they have no eye protection..... 2) I make mine and turned the C channel facing outside. That gave me square sides on the inside and channel on the outside for the wiring - so if and when my wiring goes bad I can access it easy. 3) There are plans on the internet for 3500 5x10 utilitrailer. I use C-channel, bought a bigger axel etc. and used pressure treated 2x8 on the floor. End result is a beast that probably weighs close to 800lbs. - but I have hauled some pretty heavy stuff (probably a hair overweight considering I have no brakes on the axle - but I pull with a 1ton pickup) 4) I went with torsion axle. Note, to make the mounting brakets on the inside, you have to order them that way..... I made the mistake of assuming C-channels were 2" wide. Not sure why I did that. I had to adjust with custom mouting plate. That plate/mount is stupid heavy duty.
Excellent build video. Good to see your variable ergometrics in the fit and weld up. Some sketchy wobblings should have had saw horses or 2X4 braces for secondary support. Overall +5☆ for videography, content and je ne sai quoi (french for unknown but worthy) keep it up dude.
The axle placement is 60% of the trailer deck length. For example a 10 foot trailer deck axle should be place 6 feet back from the front of the deck. On a tandem trailer that 60% ratio would be where u place the equalizer hanger . Hope this helps.
What are you going to put on that thing? You may have gone slightly overboard on the deck structure. Or I guess you could put a 6k axle under it and move pallets of concrete.
The cheap welder thing amazes me at the moment. I do lotsa field welding, railings, carports, etc. was using 80lb hobart mig welder. Bought some Lincoln/century flux wire feed, 11 lbs, $160. so far no issues. 200 hrs of welding. Can climb ladders, run on homeowner 20 amp sketchy circuits, set fire to their mulch…no issues at all. Not running 100% for sure, more like 30%, but gotta be careful on 1/8” tubing for burn through. Have everlast welders in shop. Again, trained/cert on miller, but not seeing huge difference nowadays.
Centering the axil in the very center of a trailer is prone to make a problem trailer hauling most anything. Without more tongue weight towards the vehicle, it will wonder all over the road and as speed increases, it will become dangerous for sure... The axil has to be offset to the rear of the trailer to make it haul correctly.
Steve, I'm buying a trailer from a guy that was on e a solar powered highway arrow sign. It's 4x4', so I'll add 2' to the front, and add steel in the same gauge. I'm thinking I might get it sandblasted, and at least get the bottom coated with a 10 year guarantee on "self healing" black paint offered by a local trailer company. It's about $300 for that, so it's a tad expensive, but worth it in the long run. This trailer was never titled, so a bill of sale and receipts for parts , like lights and additional materials is what they review when inspecting for the title. I'm tempted to make it a tilt bed for loading mowers, etc. That's a nice trailer you have there. I wish you success with completing it and the paperwork.
Steve just an idea for a project please make up a welding cart for your welders I'm thinking of your back plus a tip make a few stands that have a short length of thread all to adjust for a comfortable working hight for welding as I know you don't have space for a fixture table
by Adding an adjustable lenght, like double, towbar you can haul long planks of wood when needed eaven if you have small bed. Strong frame, that thing will las forever
Keep on welding steve, I've ben a producktion and site welder all my life, licenced in too many welding types and materials to remember. That thing is waaaay overbuilt, but you can forget about it for the next 30+years.
Slightly surprised not to have brakes on an HD trailer. I would not be happy towing any trailer with a GVW, including load, exceeding 500kg/1100lbs without brakes, either over-run, electric or air. I have seen a number of smaller trailers jack-knifing under heavy braking.
I believe the formula is you need at least 10% of trailer weight on the tongue for it to tow safely. Also the farther from the tongue to the axle the easier it will be to back up. I am calling the hitch point the tongue as that is called tongue weight
I’ve been trying to come up with a side gig. I got a little 120V flux core machine (that’s all I could really afford, and I don’t have 240 service to my garage) would trailers be a realistic project for that or would the welds not hold up. Been thinking about making motorcycle trailers and small utility trailers specifically.
Hey Steve be careful if you overload the trailer and hit a big bump the drawbar may hit the axle and bend it. I've been there and done that. After straightening the axle and cutting the drawbar from over the axle. I cut two diagonals for the front of the trailer and welded them to the drawbar. Love the video some great ideas there. Oh are you going to put fenders on it and what kind of decking are you using?
Not sure what the text books say, 60/40 or 20% weight down on your truck. 80% on the trailer 20% on the ball of the truck. Solid ball only, no fantasy pen ball or other gadget ball. Thanks for sharing.
A nicely done build but I confess I am wondering what you -- or your buddy -- will haul on it given its size. And I would be suspicious that the work you suggested at the end will need to be done for it to tow well. I would love to see a visit to this after you have tweaked it and lived with it for a time.
That trailer will haul anything under 2000 pounds but take it to one of the scrap yards in west Tn one time and let them unload your shreddables with the excavator and its done for. Not because of quality work and materials mind you. I had a couple good trailers too until i hailed a few loads of scrap, now every cross support is bowed to the max due to excavator operator pushing down to hard to pick up material.
Too bad that pets and small kids don't know enough to not look at welding. I remember my first experience when I was 8 or 9 and saw welding. I see it again when I am sunbathing with my eyes closed. It is etched into my retina.
I have a German shepherd who hangs in the shop all the time , but when I weld I put him outside
Always handy havin a trailer, especially one u built yourself because your more likely to take care of it. Made mine 35 yrs ago and it's still working well. Nice work.
Hi, Wansford U.K. Allways a good Saturday morning when there is a new Steve Summers vid.
You are the Bob Ross of metal fabrication and that is one happy little trailer. Love the show and keep up the great work!
As you don't have a new post today I came back to this one as It is a thing I have done many times. Love that cut where Cora comes to you in the bush. She really lives the life of Riley. I sure enjoy a build done by a good machinist / fabricator. Accuracy can never be not considered in anything. See you next week my friend. (I hope).
I’ve seen a lot of trailer mods, don’t remember if I have seen one from scratch. I think this is one that will last a lifetime.
Thanks for changing things up. It was nice. I loved the music as well
Nice job. I try to make the tongues as long as possible. Makes it so much easier to control when backing up. Otherwise they will jack knife very quickly. Also, I would add some side supports for that light weight tongue. Just me. Thanks for sharing.
Nice build Steve I think you are building it for your buddy that's been helping you aquire equipment at auctions. He should get a lot of use out of it. Cora is such a sweet dog she is so lucky she found you guys. Thanks for the video.
Just like a sawmill trailers for HD applications like this just can't be overbuilt. Oh how I love fixtures and jigs. Well worth the time and resorses to make them. I am thinking you really appreciate that wonderful flat and level pour you did on the shop resto. I will never forget all the different things you mastered when breathing the new life into that building. BTW You have some great tunes happening here today. So good I put them up into the TV and surround sound. I once had a pad ground into our long shop floor to give me a dialable surface to work on. The boss squalled like a rabbet but when I showed/ compared it to what I was spending hourly to get a good, level build he was sold. The pad was 12 x 40 so I could cut damaged logging trailers apart and back together again. Being old school I was never a fan of wire feed welders. The wire tech was new and solid low hydrogen wires had yet to be invented. Things have changed a lot since my retirement. It is nice to see welds done in the right direction esp with the spring hangers. Many will make the mistake of welding across A beam whether it is H or SQ tube. when they crack they become really dangerous to everyone on the road. I usually put a side gusset in both sides of the tow bar. About a 1/3rd of the length for that extra bit of over build on a trailer draw bar. That way it makes a great support system for a tool box or the spare tire. Just like everything like a shop we can't make anything big enough eh. Thanks bud and I will see you next post my friend.
Steve, be careful when grinding, cutting, or welding when Cora is around. Protect her eyes too. Thanks for the video. Jon
When Steve started welding, I think I saw Cora disappear.
Everybody worried about the dog. The dog, just like mine, has probably grown up in the shop and has been told countless times when to exit. Sure she knows by now
Happy Sunday Steve, Cora, and Grits! Nice change of pace, a little fabricating is good for us. I learned about notching beams on the Evo Saw ( I have one ) Instructive and inspiring as always. Thanks for sharing, God Bless.
Nice trailer build, Steve. Keeping it square, parallel, and flat is critical. Notching and welding the i beams to the web makes it really strong. Great informative video. Thanks for sharing.
Steve, in Australia, your draw bar would be classed as very light duty,,we normally have a V style draw bar, and axle is always to the rear of center to get weight on the ball ,,Regards Frank.
That’s correct, the rule of thumb is inch and one half behind center of frame for axle location
Don't forget to add some tie down points/D rings. Nice job!
Nice project....nicely done. Thanks for bringing us along.
can't wait to see the part 2 TRAILING video
I enjoy watching people carefully plan, 3d model, and execute a project. But I REALLY like watching somebody with deep experience using expert intuition and past lessons to design and build something on the fly. The "plan-model-build" feels like something I can do (probably unjustified ego, but that's how it feels), this feels more like watching somebody who's mastered a domain.
The quality of your work is directly related to your abilities as a machinist.
Every welding shop used to have a blind dog.
I didn't even know they sold trailers at Ikea!! Learn something every day.
Nice job. Welds look very nice. Really a nice to see Miss Elizabeth doing work on her truck. Was in Kansas visiting my son, nice to get away, but no place like home, and watching you n yours Saturday morning. Thanks as always. Steve in the morning, Adam in the afternoon. He told me about your channel years ago n have been hooked ever since. Thanks again for all you do. Learning and enjoying, couldn't ask for anything more. Have a great weekend. 👍
Thank you for the video Steve.
I didn't see Cora's welding helmet on 😉, I hope her eyes didn't get burned. Nice build,
...thats 2,000lb axle...Like a BOSS
Like your welding skill.
Good morning from a trying to be sunny Cambridgeshire in the UK!
Steve may I suggest a gusset under the added piece of metal to reinforce it against twisting in.
Morning everyone! From sunny Dorset! 👍
Good morning from sunny Lincolnshire 🇬🇧
It's about time to go ahead and makes them birches shorts. It's gonna get hot up there in Kentucky!
That is one serious heavy-duty trailer frame for its size. You could put a 5k axle under that thing. Anything worth engineering is worth over engineering.
The happiest man i have ever seen!
Good build over here in the UK anything over 750kg has to have brakes
Hi Steve. Love the dry humor at the beginning! As far as being overbuilt, Tom Lipton often says "nothing too strong ever broke". I tend to agree with that. Nice trailer. Al should get some good use out of it. Thanks for the video!
Hi. Nice video again. Never before seen anybody lift 2000lbs axel with bare hands! :D Greetings from Finland.
Hello from Texas!
Hope you checked for square by going corner to opposite corner. The squares in corners usually doesn't get it there.
A bit of Pythagoras can come in handy as well.
6 8 10 best to check it again
At 3:40, when you are kicking that beam into position...Is that what they call "toe in" ;-)
Love the new logo
Man I loved your video and just your vibe is amazing GREAT VIDEO!!!!!!!
That was really fun to watch, especially the plasma torch. I had to look away when you removed those steel scraps from the bandsaw with your fingers, but I know you are very skilled and careful.
11:01 Steve that didn't look to good for the dog's eyes and it didn't look like your body was blocking the flash. Hope she's ok.
@@PhillipRogers-e3k go back and watch the video at the time he marked. The dog was looking directly at the weld. Dogs aren't smart enough to protect their eyes so the owner must protect them.
God bless you!
Awesome job
When I was building trailers, of all sorts, the basic rule of thumb was for the centre of axle, or axle group, was to be 4 inches (100mm) BEHIND the centre of the bed/box. That plus drawbar/tongue weight gave enough balance to track near perfect.
Not saying your wrong but a guy that built and installed trailer equipment said put the axle at 60 to 65 percent of the length and it would give good tongue weight and track better going down the road my best friend has a car hauling trailer built with the axle in the middle and it pulls good when it is unhooked if you sit down on the front it will drop and scare the hell out of you and you have
Awesome looking trailer.
Being it's so small hopefully it will handle just fine..
But the load thats placed upon it, the c.o.g. has to be slightly in front of the center line of the trailers axle to pull correctly.
I was gonna say poor dog but he put her up by the next cut scene, my boy forgot she was there thats all. Great video bubba 💪
Nice job using C sections and I beem will never bend or break ?
As for the axl should be 100 150 mm of center to the back of trailer . As for that tow pull and hitch as its called here in Australia that one i would chuck in bin and make a heavy duty one to match your work . And as a I ways the weakest link is the tires are they rated to carry 1000 pound each ?
For me, I would like the axle a bit farther back and the tongue a bit longer. It looks too balanced too me?
I thought the axle looked light for the trailer. People will load anything that fits on a trailer then wonder why the tires blow out.
Don't weld in front of the dog, dogs are dumb and will stare at the weld and mess their eyes up.
I seen a video once of this guy letting his dog bite at the grinder sparks. Pissed me off to no end. The first thing I thought of was it’s not funny that dogs gonna have metal in his mouth and in his eyes for the rest of his life.
There’s a southern colloquialism, “He’s blind’r than a welder’s dog”
F that dog we just wanna know how to build a trailer fool 😂🎉
Clamping on heavy sawhorses with metal f clamps and chucking a bit of 3mm angle with c clamps across on each 4 corners help to keep em square 2 while you weld it up, in my experience
I’ve built a small boat trailer. The axle was marked TOP. There was a definite bow that straightened when load applied.
As Tom Lipton says..."Nothing too strong ever broke"...!
Very nice project video
I do believe you have a fan in Cora dog.
Regards,
Duck
Pro Tip: If you use Vise Grips on both sides of the Fireball squares to hold your work in place, there's no monkeying around with them. They'll hold things square without shifting.
Nice job man !!! definitely better than the new store bought cheap offshore trailers 👍👍👍
nice video, if that's the trailer when is the main event. Thank you
Steve you could bang out 10 of those trailers a day with your welding skills 😅
Thank you for sharing. Nice job.👍
Awesome job. It would have been better if you made it a bit bigger though. I know you built it for one specific purpose, but you built it well, and it will be around for a while, and I was just thinking that later in its life it could be a quad trailer.
Love the small set of chicken legs you've got there! Nice build.
Thanks for making the video....
1) Make sure your dog is out of the way - they have no eye protection.....
2) I make mine and turned the C channel facing outside. That gave me square sides on the inside and channel on the outside for the wiring - so if and when my wiring goes bad I can access it easy.
3) There are plans on the internet for 3500 5x10 utilitrailer. I use C-channel, bought a bigger axel etc. and used pressure treated 2x8 on the floor. End result is a beast that probably weighs close to 800lbs. - but I have hauled some pretty heavy stuff (probably a hair overweight considering I have no brakes on the axle - but I pull with a 1ton pickup)
4) I went with torsion axle. Note, to make the mounting brakets on the inside, you have to order them that way..... I made the mistake of assuming C-channels were 2" wide. Not sure why I did that. I had to adjust with custom mouting plate. That plate/mount is stupid heavy duty.
Excellent build video. Good to see your variable ergometrics in the fit and weld up. Some sketchy wobblings should have had saw horses or 2X4 braces for secondary support. Overall +5☆ for videography, content and je ne sai quoi (french for unknown but worthy) keep it up dude.
Dang! did you see that guy lift that 2000# axle. What a beast.
Nice build Steve. The draw bar Ratio should be in the instructions.
The axle placement is 60% of the trailer deck length. For example a 10 foot trailer deck axle should be place 6 feet back from the front of the deck. On a tandem trailer that 60% ratio would be where u place the equalizer hanger . Hope this helps.
From the wise Keith Rucker: "nothing too strong ever broke". Theres no harm in over-building your trailer! (or anything else)
What are you going to put on that thing? You may have gone slightly overboard on the deck structure. Or I guess you could put a 6k axle under it and move pallets of concrete.
The cheap welder thing amazes me at the moment. I do lotsa field welding, railings, carports, etc. was using 80lb hobart mig welder. Bought some Lincoln/century flux wire feed, 11 lbs, $160. so far no issues. 200 hrs of welding. Can climb ladders, run on homeowner 20 amp sketchy circuits, set fire to their mulch…no issues at all. Not running 100% for sure, more like 30%, but gotta be careful on 1/8” tubing for burn through. Have everlast welders in shop. Again, trained/cert on miller, but not seeing huge difference nowadays.
Centering the axil in the very center of a trailer is prone to make a problem trailer hauling most anything. Without more tongue weight towards the vehicle, it will wonder all over the road and as speed increases, it will become dangerous for sure... The axil has to be offset to the rear of the trailer to make it haul correctly.
Hi Steve, as Frank has said your draw bar is very light,your frame looks good but build a good strong V draw bar.
Steve, I'm buying a trailer from a guy that was on e a solar powered highway arrow sign. It's 4x4', so I'll add 2' to the front, and add steel in the same gauge. I'm thinking I might get it sandblasted, and at least get the bottom coated with a 10 year guarantee on "self healing" black paint offered by a local trailer company. It's about $300 for that, so it's a tad expensive, but worth it in the long run.
This trailer was never titled, so a bill of sale and receipts for parts , like lights and additional materials is what they review when inspecting for the title. I'm tempted to make it a tilt bed for loading mowers, etc.
That's a nice trailer you have there. I wish you success with completing it and the paperwork.
Steve just an idea for a project please make up a welding cart for your welders I'm thinking of your back plus a tip make a few stands that have a short length of thread all to adjust for a comfortable working hight for welding as I know you don't have space for a fixture table
by Adding an adjustable lenght, like double, towbar you can haul long planks of wood when needed eaven if you have small bed.
Strong frame, that thing will las forever
Keep on welding steve, I've ben a producktion and site welder all my life, licenced in too many welding types and materials to remember.
That thing is waaaay overbuilt, but you can forget about it for the next 30+years.
Slightly surprised not to have brakes on an HD trailer. I would not be happy towing any trailer with a GVW, including load, exceeding 500kg/1100lbs without brakes, either over-run, electric or air. I have seen a number of smaller trailers jack-knifing under heavy braking.
Excellent. 👍
I believe the formula is you need at least 10% of trailer weight on the tongue for it to tow safely. Also the farther from the tongue to the axle the easier it will be to back up. I am calling the hitch point the tongue as that is called tongue weight
I’ve been trying to come up with a side gig. I got a little 120V flux core machine (that’s all I could really afford, and I don’t have 240 service to my garage) would trailers be a realistic project for that or would the welds not hold up. Been thinking about making motorcycle trailers and small utility trailers specifically.
Thnks, great vid!
Hey Steve be careful if you overload the trailer and hit a big bump the drawbar may hit the axle and bend it. I've been there and done that. After straightening the axle and cutting the drawbar from over the axle. I cut two diagonals for the front of the trailer and welded them to the drawbar. Love the video some great ideas there. Oh are you going to put fenders on it and what kind of decking are you using?
Not sure what the text books say, 60/40 or 20% weight down on your truck. 80% on the trailer 20% on the ball of the truck. Solid ball only, no fantasy pen ball or other gadget ball. Thanks for sharing.
NICE...ya goofy m8te from Australia 😊
Good job 👏
A nicely done build but I confess I am wondering what you -- or your buddy -- will haul on it given its size. And I would be suspicious that the work you suggested at the end will need to be done for it to tow well. I would love to see a visit to this after you have tweaked it and lived with it for a time.
One of the first things you learn in welding school is measure twice cut once
I'm sure a shop of his caliber has a pipe stretcher tucked away somewhere.
Very nice..!
Both the trailer and this video were very expertly done!
Also:
Q: “What kind of Dog is Cora”
A: “Yes” 😉🙃🤣
She's a shop supervisor dog that must approve of everything before it's done.
@@Bob_Adkins Like Bailey (RIP) with Brian Block's projects....
Heavy duty trailer. You have the lightest tongue bar you can find. and an extremely lightweight axle.
Towards treats for Kora
How did you get in the position for weld pro to just send you welders for no cost
Do you have a material list for the start of the video mate
shaft must be located at 60% of total length, to keep more weight on coupler ball, than shaft it self, it gives more control while driving..
I usually do 60/40 split 60% in front of axle and 40% behind.
there is a formula for axle location however i would think what and where you are putting the load would change all that
Curious about how much it all cost
That trailer will haul anything under 2000 pounds but take it to one of the scrap yards in west Tn one time and let them unload your shreddables with the excavator and its done for. Not because of quality work and materials mind you. I had a couple good trailers too until i hailed a few loads of scrap, now every cross support is bowed to the max due to excavator operator pushing down to hard to pick up material.
Too bad that pets and small kids don't know enough to not look at welding. I remember my first experience when I was 8 or 9 and saw welding. I see it again when I am sunbathing with my eyes closed. It is etched into my retina.
in the UK all trailers have to have working brakes if over 750KG
What is that huge Miller thing on the wall? AC Unit?