Technically speaking more tires on the ground would provide better “flotation” in soft conditions due to a larger foot print spread out over a larger surface area.
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I agree with what you are saying but let's be clear that traction isn't really important in a trailer except for a few very limited scenarios. We're not talking drive axles here.There is no theory vs reality. Only science. More tires means less weight per square inch which means more traction and flotation.
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I agree with what you are saying but let's be clear that traction isn't really important in a trailer except for a few very limited scenarios. We're not talking drive axles here.
And now you've got my mind questioning since you mentioned science; does less weight per square inch really mean better traction? Or does the increased contact patch when one airs down cause the better traction(I get that in real world situations contact patch size and psi go hand in hand)? Wouldn't an ideal situation be more contact patch AND more weight per square inch?
Maybe apples to oranges but I used to be on a hot ail balloon crew. We had one single axle trailer, the rest were tandem. The tandems did much better off road than the single axle trailers. Some sand and mud but mostly hard packed two track forest roads.
thanks! So do you still use the 10% rule for the tongue weight on yours?I've got tandem torsion axles (dexter) and they are amazing off pavement, with all 4 having independent movement and shock absorbing capability its like it floats over rough terrain instead of rocking back and forth or bouncing around on washboard roads.. with tandem torsions however its very important your trailer rides level on flat ground so the weight is distributed evenly, if your tongue was low the front axle would be loaded more than the rear.
another really nice thing is they are quiet, trailer is virtually silent creeping along a dirt road where if you've ever towed a tandem leaf down rough roads you know it sounds like hell is breaking loose when you've got washboard roads.
I'm closer to 15% because toy haulers are tongue heavy, but its better to be too heavy on tongue (if TV supports it) than too light (10% is a minimum not a max).. my trailer is somewhere around 5000#, tongue is around 700# and the axles are both 3500#.. I need to take it to some scales this season now that I'm nearly done outfitting it.
you think a single axle would be better for my situation? (drops off ~600#)mine is like 6x13.5, and entire thing is aluminum.. I think your going to find it very hard to build it under those weight ceilings.. I've got 1 lithium battery and 2x 7g water tanks and no toys in it yet for reference (just camping eq)