charlesshoults
New member
While I want to weld up a proper offroad trailer myself, I needed something a little more immediate. I ordered a 1090lb Harbor Freight 40"x48" trailer last week, primarily for a road trip I have coming up in June. Including shipping, the trailer cost me $186. My '95 Grand Cherokee has decent capacity if I'm on my own, but when other people and their things are in the Jeep with me, it gets kind of cramped. I learned that last year. I'll be driving to northern Missouri to pick up my mom, then on to western Kentucky to pick up my son, camping two nights on the way back here to western Nebraska, about 2300 miles in all. So Harbor Freight it is. I'm hoping to take my Lab with me, so all of the camping gear will get put in the trailer.
The trailer came in Monday. I got the frame put together that night and the axle mounted the next day. I read several posts about people complaining about the nuts and bolts, stress fractures and fenders falling off. To begin with, I used Loctite on every bolt, but I'm thinking I may replace all of the hardware later on. Friday morning, I moved the trailer from the carport I was building it under, backed it up right into a post, breaking one of the lenses. I haven't even hooked it up to the Jeep yet. Fortunately, the lights are standard trailer lights and I was able to get a replacement lens for under $3. And, as a bare frame, the thing seems really flexible. I'm hoping after it has a floor, it's a little more rigid.
I went to HomeDepot this morning and bought pressure treated 5/4" deck boards to build the floor and walls of the trailer. The boards, deck screws and angle brackets for the walls cost me $103. All of the things I'm planning to add to the trailer will cost me quite a bit more than what I spent on the trailer to begin with. I hooked it up to the Jeep was I was building the floor and I've got to say that the Jeep dwarfs the trailer. The thing just looks tiny behind it.
I'll take pictures of the trailer tomorrow. The floor is seven 5/4" x 6" (5.625) x 48" boards on top of three lateral boards. I screwed the boards together from below so that I don't have screws visible from the top. The floor is attached to the trailer frame with nine carriage bolts. The trailer is designed to use 1"x4" stakes but I'll be using the same boards throughout. Walls will be three horizontal boards with a 2" gap between them, so 20.875" high from the frame and 18.875" from the floor. I'll have fold-down gates at front and back and a canvas cover. I want to be able to use it as a motorcycle trailer later on. Instead of bolting the fenders to the frame, I may connect them to the wooden walls with four bolts each. This would widen the fenders by 2" which might initially look odd, but if I will most likely be swapping out to a heavier axle and larger tires after the trip. For tools, straps and bungee cords, I want to bolt two .50 cal ammo cans to each fender, one on the horizontal and one on the rear slope. In front of the fenders, I'm looking at welding up brackets for fuel and water cans.
The trailer came in Monday. I got the frame put together that night and the axle mounted the next day. I read several posts about people complaining about the nuts and bolts, stress fractures and fenders falling off. To begin with, I used Loctite on every bolt, but I'm thinking I may replace all of the hardware later on. Friday morning, I moved the trailer from the carport I was building it under, backed it up right into a post, breaking one of the lenses. I haven't even hooked it up to the Jeep yet. Fortunately, the lights are standard trailer lights and I was able to get a replacement lens for under $3. And, as a bare frame, the thing seems really flexible. I'm hoping after it has a floor, it's a little more rigid.
I went to HomeDepot this morning and bought pressure treated 5/4" deck boards to build the floor and walls of the trailer. The boards, deck screws and angle brackets for the walls cost me $103. All of the things I'm planning to add to the trailer will cost me quite a bit more than what I spent on the trailer to begin with. I hooked it up to the Jeep was I was building the floor and I've got to say that the Jeep dwarfs the trailer. The thing just looks tiny behind it.
I'll take pictures of the trailer tomorrow. The floor is seven 5/4" x 6" (5.625) x 48" boards on top of three lateral boards. I screwed the boards together from below so that I don't have screws visible from the top. The floor is attached to the trailer frame with nine carriage bolts. The trailer is designed to use 1"x4" stakes but I'll be using the same boards throughout. Walls will be three horizontal boards with a 2" gap between them, so 20.875" high from the frame and 18.875" from the floor. I'll have fold-down gates at front and back and a canvas cover. I want to be able to use it as a motorcycle trailer later on. Instead of bolting the fenders to the frame, I may connect them to the wooden walls with four bolts each. This would widen the fenders by 2" which might initially look odd, but if I will most likely be swapping out to a heavier axle and larger tires after the trip. For tools, straps and bungee cords, I want to bolt two .50 cal ammo cans to each fender, one on the horizontal and one on the rear slope. In front of the fenders, I'm looking at welding up brackets for fuel and water cans.