Trailer Build

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
This will be a long, drawn out process, but I'll attempt a trailer build thread for my current project. I'm doing the build thread on a couple Jeep boards as well so some of this is geared at making it work with a Jeep. We have a number of other trailers at home and up at the ranch for various duties ranging in size from a 30' gooseneck to a 14K tandem, some stock trailers, and my little 5x10 I regularly pull behind the Jeep. The 5x10 handles most chores well, but lacks in a few areas that I'd like to address with this new trailer. If all our trailers saw was highway use, we'd be fine, but our property is 45 minutes off paved roads up in the mountains over rough road. Some gravel, some dirt and some classified as "improved" to say the least. When it's washed out, it's rough at best. Our trailers take a beating, as does our equipment or gear. When it's dry, everything gets covered in dirt and filth, as it also does when it's raining or snowing. I'm going to attempt to build this new trailer with full sides and a removeable locking top as well as tailgate to help keep things clean inside. It will be dual-purpose for camping, but also utility work as well. Rough dimensions will be around 4'x6' and around 30" deep or thereabouts. Haven't finalized any of this yet except that I want a full 48" INSIDE box width for sure. Track width will be pretty close to the Jeep and I intend to run matching tires/rims as the Jeep so I can swap the spare from Jeep to trailer as need be and cut down on weight/bulk by only carrying one spare instead of one on the Jeep and one on the trailer both. It will be built with off-road use in mind and intended to take the beating we dish out and HOPEFULLY hold up better than our other trailers, yet still weigh in light enough that I can pull it easy enough with the Jeep when fully loaded. I HOPE I can accomplish that when it's all said and done.

Let start with the parts list:

Here is the axle setup. It's a 3500# Dexter with 10" electric brakes. The Jeep track width is roughly 60" but I'm running Spydertrax spacers so I had the axle cut to 63" WMS to be close to the Jeep with the spacers included. Part of this also deals with measuring for springs centers and the fact that I want a full 48" INSIDE box width, and taking into account the measurements needed for tire buldge measured at the fenders and distance needed to the frame. For springs, I was worried standard trailer springs would be too stiff, so I went with the longest I could get at 27" and had them remove a leaf. These are "softride" spring packs 3 pack leafs 27" instead of the standard 24/25" 4 leaf pack you normally get with this setup. Also have a trailer break-away box, bearings, etc. The builder upgraded me to EZ-Lube spindles as well, where the entire spindle has been outfitted with a zerk, drilled and tapped with a grease channel feeding the inner bearing first, then grease flows through the inner bearing, fills the cavity and works it's way to the outter bearing. These are NOT your typical "bearing buddy" setup, this is the actual Dexter EZ-Lube spindles.

axleparts032.jpg


Next, for the hitch, I went with the Lock-N-Roll setup. This is the 6,000# rated hitch as I felt the 2,000# would not be adequate and obviously the 15,000# was a bit overkill. Obviously it's the 2" slip-in style and will have the ability to mount forward or rear of the trailer as I'll have a receiver front and rear both. It's the 3-axis design and should work great for both on and off-road use. Very well built. Very nice setup. I got it from the Lock-N-Roll site direct here:

http://www.locknroll.com/index.aspx
and used the #303 adjustable drop/rise bar hitch here:
http://www.locknroll.com/products_sub.aspx?cid=2&id=26
and the #212 2" slide in coupler here:
http://www.locknroll.com/products_sub.aspx?cid=1&id=28

axleparts034.jpg


For tires and rims, I'll be running the matching Jeep Moab rims and matching tires. I found a great deal on some matching Moabs here in Washington State. The tires are shot, but I'll use them for now to take measurements from to get the trailer started and get a roller going, then buy tires later when I'm further along. Final tire size will be 255/85/16. Here's the factory Moabs with the stock 245/75/16 MT/R's:

axleparts030.jpg


more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 
Last edited:

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
Lights

As far as lighting goes, I really had a tough decision with lights for this trailer. I am CONSTANTLY replacing lights on our other trailers for various reasons. We are always breaking taillights somehow, someway whether it be a tree falling on them, cattle chewing on them and ripping them off, hay bales falling over and smashing them or various other things going wrong, or just not paying attention and backing into things and breaking them, we are constantly replacing lights. I replace a lot of bulbs due to vibration on the gravel roads that just beat the tar out of the filaments and shake them loose too. As much money as I have in full replacement housings and replacement bulbs, it just made me sick, so I thought long and hard about this trailer and how I wanted to go about handling the task of illuminating it to meet WA laws and safety standards to be legal for road use yet somehow possibly save some money in the long run by not replacing so many bulbs or housings down the road.

Thankfully, I got in touch with Doug, who happens to know a little something about trailer lights. Doug runs two on-line internet businesses specializing in LED lights and does an excellent job at it as well. I ordered all of my stuff through http://ledtrailerlights.com/ but you can also check out http://www.4x4led.com for a few different items for your truck. Doug is GREAT to work with and really knows his lights. I had a TON of questions for him as I knew NOTHING about LED lights in general. I fired a bunch of emails and PM's back and forth and he was lightning fast in his response and very thorough and detailed and more than happy to help out. He even listed various WAC codes and pointed me in the direction of the right legal descriptions I needed for some various things I had concerns about as well. He even helped with some wiring questions I had. After talking with Doug, the choice was clear. It might mean a little more money up front, but in the long run, I think it will be a sound investment for this trailer and will cut my costs down the road in replacement housings and bulbs as LED's last longer and are vibration proof as well as water and dust proof also. I ordered up the following for this trailer as a start:

For brake lights/STT's I went with 42 LED Maxxima's as seen here along with grommets and harness:
http://ledtrailerlights.com/stt/stt_M63420R.htm

lights010.jpg


For backup lights I went with these 27 LED units along with grommets and harness:
http://ledtrailerlights.com/other/H60027WSD.htm

lights002.jpg


For marker lights, I went with 10 LED 2" round Amber and Red units as seen here-both with amber and red lens:
http://ledtrailerlights.com/cm/cm_HD20010-2inch.htm

lights006.jpg


Here's the harness and grommets, both very nice units and well made:

lights005.jpg


lights011.jpg


lights003.jpg


As you can tell from the thread so far, it will be a long while before I get to install the lights and try them out. When I get to that point though, I'll post back with some shots of them actually lit up and in use. Doug was a HUGE help and I'd highly recommend anyone looking into lighting for a future trailer build to consider LED's and give Doug a shout and discuss your options. I think it will be well worth your while in the long run. I haven't even got this one built yet and I'm already planning on swapping the lights out to LED's on a couple of our other trailers that we use the most.

Thanks Doug for all the help and for the Great Service!

more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
Spacers

I wanted to run matching tires/wheels on the trailer so that I could only carry one spare between the Jeep and trailer both and swap between either rig in an emergency if need be. With a good tire repair kit, one spare is all that is really needed anyway, so no need carrying two. It's a good place to save weight and space for other stuff. After getting my 3500# axle with electric brakes and EZ-lube spindles, and finally locating my pair of Moab rims, I came to the realization that the Moab rims would NOT bolt onto the 3500# brake drums/hubs as a direct bolt-on like I'd hoped. This meant a wheel spacer or adapter would be required to make it work. Great. I'd had the axle cut to the Jeep track width already with the Jeep spacers in mind, so my axle for the trailer is already at 63", which means my spacers or adapters for the trailer will be even wider than I wanted. Oh well, it has to be done in order to work. In the pic below, you an see why. Basically what is happening is the center bore of the 3500# brake drum hub is roughly 2 1/2" outside diameter and sticks up 1 3/4" from the WMS. The lug studs are only about 1 1/2" tall if I remember right. What happens is the center cap on the Moab rim is only 1 7/8" and the hub for the brake drum comes into contact with the narrower center cap and won't fit through the smaller hole. You can see that in the pic below-obviously the shorter wheel studs won't fit through the hole either and the WMS won't even contact:

spacers018.jpg


I searched for a while trying to find an adapter or spacer that would work in order to mate the Moab rim to the 3500# brake drum. As we all know, the Moabs are 16x8 rims with 5x4.5 bolt pattern and 5" BS. It goes without saying the brake drum is also 5x4.5 bolt pattern which is a common off-the-shelf trailer axle part size, but the hard part is finding a spacer that has a center bore large enough to clear the hub on the drum. I run Spydertrax on my Jeep and have for well over 30,000 miles now, but after talking with Spydertrax direct and explaining the problem, it was determined by the Spydertrax rep that they would NOT work and they recommended I find a different manufacturer for my trailer. I could have ordered them, then taken them to a machine shop and had the centers machined out to the larger diameter and had the hub-centric ring removed and made them work, which then would have weakened the spacer and made them questionable from a safety standpoint, but why? It didn't make sense to go to the trouble and hassle of ruining and weakening a spacer making it questionable and unsafe, so the search continued. I only mention this here simply because I've seen it mentioned in other threads on other boards as a solution. It is not safe and I do not recommend it. There are other solutions that are much easier and much safer, so please, use some common sense and just buy one that fits right off the shelf.

Where do I do that you ask? Well after some searching I learned most folks are ordering custom spacers made to fit their needs. That is all fine and dandy, but is rather expensive and takes a few days to order, make and ship so it could be a while. I needed spacers now and didn't want to spend a fortune getting them. I thought I'd check one last place before going custom at a place here relatively local out in Cashmere Washington at JT's Differentials here: http://www.justdifferentials.com/ I noticed they sold wheel spacers so I called up and explained my situation, then asked if they knew the center bore diameter. Jeremy had answered the phone and said he didn't remember the exact dimensions but could I please hold and he'd go measure real quick and be right back. He was back in a matter of seconds stating that the center bore was right about 2.8". Great! the hub diameter was about 2 1/2" so this was a little more than I needed. He said I've got 1.25", 1.5" and 2" in stock, come on out if you think they'll work, I'm here till 5:00. I asked if he'd mind if I brought a rim and the drum to do some test fitting to make sure I got the right one. Jeremy said sure, no problem, bring them out with you, I'll have one of each on the counter waiting and we can test fit each to find the one that works best so you know they'll fit. Awesome, I'll be right out.

When I got to the shop, I test fit the first spacer in the 1.25" size as I wanted to keep the track width as narrow as possible. The spacer worked great! It bolted right on, everything worked fine, or at least it seemed to. No need to test the 1.5" or 2" spacers, so I just paid Jeremy for the 1.25" then was on my way back home to fit everything together, excited I finally had what I needed. The next day I got to putting the axle together, fit the spacers up then found when I put the center cap on, the wheel wouldn't fit-I was at least 1/2" too short!!! After inspecting things further, the dust cap for the axle made contact with the center cap on the rim. Crap! I didn't take that into account when I got the spacers from JT's the day before. After examining things I needed another 1/2" minimum of clearance to make this all work. JT's had a 1.5" spacer which would get me another 1/4" and I THOUGHT I could cheat another 1/4" pretty easy in another area so the simple answer was to call JT's back and explain my screw up, and ask if I could exchange my 1.25" spacer for a 1.5". Luckily I got Jeremy on the phone again who already knew my situation. I explained what happened and asked if it would be at all possible to make the swap. Sure, no problem, bring them on in, I'll have the 1.5's sitting here ready for you when you get here. Great! I was in a rush and sure enough, they were on the desk waiting when I got there so I was able to just drop them off, make the trade and go. The customer service at JT's was excellent, I was impressed with the help I got with these spacers!

The spacers themselves that you'll need are regular Jeep 5x4.5 bolt patter in the 1.5" thickness. They are made from 6061 T-6 aluminum using grade 8 hardware. JT's has these made to their specs for them. The center bore is about 2.8" so it will bolt directly on to the 3500# brake drum making it a safe, smart and easy way to make the Moab rims work on the trailer. You can get them in 1.25", 1.5" and 2" for the Jeep, but they sell other spacers for other rigs as well, and I think even for 8 lug rigs as well. Here's what I got for the trailer that was a direct bolt-on:
http://www.justdifferentials.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=467&products_id=2163
You'll notice the cost was right on these, which was about half or less than going custom so that was nice. I bolted them on using red loctite like I did with the Spydertrax spacers on my Jeep as I haven't had any trouble with them in over 30,000 miles now, so I expect these will perform just as well on the trailer.

spacers014.jpg


spacers015.jpg


more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
In the post above, I mentioned an issue with the dust caps sticking out too far and making contact with the center caps and preventing the wheel from bolting on. The dust cap on the axle is also too large a diameter to fit through the center cap hole in the rim so that leaves me with either finding a way to make it all fit together, or boring out the center of the rim a little so the dust cap would fit through. If I did that, the center caps would not fit any longer and it would create an aesthetic issue when I rotate the wheels/tires to the Jeep. If I never do that, then it won't be an issue, but I'd like the option so I want to keep things clean and functioning as they should. I'll find a way to make things fit. Here's the problem:

spacers019.jpg


Here's two possible areas to buy clearance:

spacers020.jpg


I started with the center caps and used a dremel to cut the teeth and remove about half the material back to where it just begins to engage on the inner lip of the Moab rim. This effectively removed about 1/4" of material. Remember I got the other 1/4" by moving to the 1.5" spacers. Granted, my track width on the axle has now moved from 63" to 66", but it had to be done. My inside box width will easily be 48", likely much more now, so that goal was accomplished, may as well take advantage of that extra width. Anyway, with a simple cutting disc on the dremel, the plastic teeth came right off:

centercaps003.jpg


Here they are all cut down:

centercaps013.jpg


Here is the unmodded cap and the clearance issue it created:

centercaps007.jpg


Here is the rough cut cap prior to smoothing out and the clearance gains I needed to make it work:

centercaps009.jpg


Here you can see the dust cap and how it didn't fit prior to the mod, where it sticks out beyond the WMS-this would NOT allow the wheel to mount to the hub-keep in mind the dust cap would NOT fit through the center cap hole even with the center cap removed:

centercaps012.jpg


And here is the clearance gained after trimming the dust cap-roughly 1/4" was gained here and you can see the dust cap just BARELY fits inside the Moab WMS:

centercaps011.jpg


more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
Dust Caps

I spent some time with the dust caps to clearance them a bit. I mentioned "massaging" them a bit earlier-perhaps I should rephrase that to "modding" the dust caps now...

It's not exactly pretty, and was more work than I planned, but they'll be covered by the wheels and I think it will work with about 1/16" to spare now. With some trial and error, it involved testing with Mig, then ended up with grinding a bit off the top, TIG welding a patch, grinding another tiny section TIGing it, letting it cool, grinding another tiny section, more TIG, cool, grind, TIG, cool, grind, TIG, etc., then grind down to make it look decent. Here's the finished results:

dustcapmod002.jpg


dustcapmod004.jpg


Here you can see prior clearance prior to the mod at just over 1 5/16":

dustcapmod005.jpg


Here you can see the modded cap at just under 1 1/8":

dustcapmod006.jpg


Hard to see, but all this has to fit in about 1 3/16" space:

dustcapmod007.jpg


Since it LOOKS like it will fit with a HAIR bit of room to spare, I'm going to try and work on the second cap tonight if time permits. This should be all the clearance I need and everything should bolt up just dandy now. Once I get a day off, it should be smooth sailing for assembling the axle now so I can measure for, and burn in the spring perches-knock on wood...

I've since got both dust caps modded and they appear to provide enough clearance. Work schedule has changed again and it looks like instead of getting the weekend off to work on the axle, I get to work 5 more days for a 17 day stretch this time. Will be a while before I get any more progress on the trailer build. I'll update the build thread when I have something more accomplished.

more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

JeepN95YJ

Adventurer
Why not just buy some low-profile dust caps?

x2...


I haven't seen the spindle stickout from the hub yet, but I'd bet a low profile cap would be the ticket.

OR...add a little sealer to the wheel center cap and to the hub face when you bolt on the wheel and let the wheel BECOME the dust cap.
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
Hey guys, I would have loved to buy some low-profile caps. That was my first thought and I tried to do so, but unfortunately it wouldn't work. At first glance, it appears there'd be plenty of room, but these caps fit so tight onto the spindle, that the little bubble in the rubber plug is actually contoured to fit around the grease zerk! That lower flat edge where the rubber plug fits is literally RIGHT there at the edge of the spindle. I had trouble modifying the caps down low enough to fit as I was afraid simply tapping them flat with a hammer would have altered the distance of that plug. That's when the idea to grind a little gap, then weld fill weld it, move to the other side, and go back and forth with it-that way it kept the plug level the same height all the way around, without pulling it off center or dropping the distance. Was kind of a PITA, but it worked. Really set me back as I was hoping to just slap the wheels on once I got the spacer issue figured out. Never realized it would be this much hassle trying to match Jeep/Trailer rims together. I think the extra effort up front will be worth it in the long run though, not having to carry two spares, and the ability to swap between trailer and tow rig if need be. With a good repair kit, that should handle everything else.

I must admit I'm a little worried at this point. I've had to fix or mod all of our other trailers at some point, but never actually built one from the ground up before. With all the silly little issues that have come up so far just trying to match rims that have set me back, I could be in for a long haul. Was hoping to get this thing built and ready for use before winter, but with my work schedule, and these setbacks, I'm wondering now if that may not be possible before snow falls. From what I hear it takes about 3-4 weeks just to get inspected once you make the appointment after it's built. I've got a long road ahead at this rate.

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

ntsqd

Heretic Car Camper
Assuming the grease caps didn't hit the wheels I'd have just pitched the center caps on all of the wheels, but I don't like center caps anyway so that would've just been the justification. :)

As tight as the wheels are when bolted on and since the WMS of the wheels are continuous, if the WMS' were kept clean you wouldn't need any sealant.
 

R_Lefebvre

Expedition Leader
I was thinking low profile grease caps with no zerks. Just pack 'em with grease and slap 'em on. Many trailers run like this.
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
That's a good idea. I hadn't thought about that. I'd have to check clearance from the mounting ring to the end of the spindle where the zerk is recessed at (it does protrude a hair-hence the bubble in the rubber plug), but those style caps are rounded and should provide more clearance under the center cap theoretically. If they're tall enough to clear the spindle, I bet I could even drill them to accept the rubber plug... Hummm... You might be on to something there. I'll have to look into that when I get some time off work hopefully next week or the week after perhaps. If not with these, then spares for sure.

I have a ton of other parts to grease on the Jeep including 16 JJ's alone not including steering joints or other non-suspension parts so the less time I can spend taking things apart on the trailer, the better. I've never had greaseable spindles before, so I'm not really sure how often they should be greased. As frequently as I grease the Jeep to keep water/debris purged, I guess I'm thinking for ease of maintenance it would be handy not to have to pull the caps on the trailer for the same reason, but I could be wrong, maybe it won't need it that often, I don't know.

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

'05TJLWBRUBY

Adventurer
Wheel Fitment

OK so with all the above work into the dust caps, center caps, spacers, etc., it was time to test-fit everything on the axle to see if it fit, and find out both if it did for one, but also IF it did, then I could start measuring for my spring centers which would allow me to start the actual welding process. Here's how it all looks:

Here's a shot of the spindle depth that was causing all the issue with the dust caps and why the outter lip on the cap needed to be lowered a bit. This is just one solution that I came up with-you might possibly run another style cap, I don't know, I still haven't had time to look into that. It's on my list to try though for spares.

wheelaxle030.jpg


This shot's kinda fuzzy but you can see with the cap on, just how far out the spindle sticks and the zerk with the flat surface of the cap in place-you really need all the clearance you can get.

wheelaxle031.jpg


Here's kind of a side shot-hard to tell, but the zerk comes out right to the surface of that lower flat edge.

wheelaxle032.jpg


Here's a shot with the wheel mounted. Only three lug nuts in place, but they're locked down good and in firmly in place. As you can see, not much room for error, and the tolerances are tight.

wheelaxle033.jpg


Here's a side shot of just how little room there really is with the wheel locked down and dust cap in place on the axle-it is TIGHT. I was hoping for a LITTLE clearance back there, and that's just about what I got!

wheelaxle034.jpg


And the money shot-it all came together and actually works!!! The center cap actually fits in place like I'd hoped for. There is literally NOT much room to spare, but it fits, the wheel spins and rotates, everything works well.

wheelaxle035.jpg


wheelaxle036.jpg


I needed all the room I could get and everything worked out exactly as I'd hoped. Now I can move on to the spring perches and start work on the actual cutting/welding part of the build.

more to come...

Best of Luck,

Mike
 

BigDaveZJ

Adventurer
That's an awful lot of work just to run center caps IMO. And now you have to take the wheel off to grease the axle, if you didn't run the center cap in the wheel you wouldn't have to jack up the trailer and remove the wheels to grease them.
 

GetupandGO

New member
Trailer Wheels

I had the same problem with my US M101a1 trailer. Thought it would be nice to have the same rim/tire setup as my Jeep LWB, only to find out the center holes weren't big enough to accomadate the axle(same Dexter Axle by the way). I ended up taking the two wheels back and getting with 4wd and rerimming all six wheels. The cost wasn't too bad and it all turned out for the better.
 

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