Yes, trailers have and will break when loaded under the weight rating. Big trailers are giant springs, they are constantly flexing. Anything that flexes only has a certain amount of "cycles" before it stresses and breaks. Take any piece of steel and flex it repeatedly, it will eventually break, it's not if, it's when.
It's a very bad day when you break a trailer with a load on. That's why I shut down my trailer last year and did a rebuild on it. I had the coffin, booster, and neck structures rebuilt. They were full of stress cracks, and this trailer does not get abused.
Your 55 ton specs
Discussion in 'Heavy Haul Trucking Forum' started by noluck, Nov 23, 2016.
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No offense, but most American trailer manufacturers do not use a very good quality of steel.
I'd rather have a used trailer built with T100 and/or T130 steel any day of the week over a new railed built of inferior quality materials.
Canadian trailer manufacturers have to factor cold temperature into the structural integrity, which is why most use these higher tensile grades of steel that don't get as brittle in the extreme cold in winter.skootertrashr6, snowman_w900 and Oxbow Thank this. -
If your gonna look at a Canadian Rgn manufacturer get a temisko trailer. Heavy but ridiculously well built. Makes a talbert or trailking look cheap
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We certainly don't use our 50 ton, 1996 Aspen every day, and I bought it used so have no knowledge of the kind of use it had in the past other than looking at the condition, but we have hauled 85 to 90k a number of times off highway and it has held up well. Hence I would agree with Heavy Hammer that Canadian trailers are well made. Had to reseal hydraulic rams, but other than maintenance have done nothing else. The wiring was very well done too as we have had zero issues with it.
snowman_w900 Thanks this. -
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It looks just like that one JD.
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I like the looks of some of the newer necks that various manufacturers make that are arched to allow more clearance to the frame, but we have not had any problems and can raise it quite high if necessary.
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