chris_d
Established Member
Dear All,
I am teetering on the brink of buying/building a cargo trailer. As I have no experience of using one I would appreciate your input.
Mandatory requirements:
1. Carry at least 1000Kg of sand/gravel/topsoil.
2. Bed size suitable to transport a ride on mower with dimensions 109x211cm.
3. Gravity tipper function.
Optional requirements:
4. Carry two 30"x8' oak logs (~1400Kg).
5. Ram tipper function (replaces 3 above).
6. Dual axle for greater stability.
I've been motivated to this position due to:
- A desire to buy landscaping/building materials at will;
- Being fed up with using an alaskan mill (hand-held) to process oak logs - now wishing to send them to a local sawyer.
However, these immediate motivations will be relatively short lived ie last no more than another two years whilst I renovate my property. After this, the trailer would be used infrequently to take my mower for blade sharpening, trips to the household recycling centre and the yearly horse hay purchase. Hence I have a dilemma, do I invest in a trailer or tolerate the inconvenience/cost of merchant deliveries and mower/sawyer collections? I'm not expecting you to answer that but my decision is heavily influenced by the cost-benefit trade-off of specific trailer types which is where I'd appreciate some guidance.
I believe that an 8'x5' Ifor Williams tipping trailer, http://www.iwt.co.uk/products/tippers/tt85ge.htm, ticks all the boxes but costs a ludicrous ~£2.5K. Going slightly more generic, a TipTek (http://www.trailertek.com/the-tiptek-tipping-trailer/) still costs ~£2K which still seems a bit OTT.
If I compromise on the tipping function, settling for this sort of thing: http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=150354891226 which I don't really know how to describe (gravity tipper? ie no ram) then that will cost ~£800. Is this style of tipper useless ie do you spend most of your time stood on it with a shovel?
If I were to consider a single axle trailer then are they impossible and/or too dangerous to tip by yourself?
I've looked into making a trailer but when you total the cost of a decent welding kit and all the equipment required for legal compliance then the ~£800 trailer above seems good value since I also save my precious time - but can you make a decent looking tipping trailer for less?
Finally, should I be less scared of buying a second hand trailer? It is not really the thought of buying a dud but the hassle of travelling to see incorrectly described items that puts me off. Sorry this turned into an essay.
Any advice most welcome,
C
P.S. I hoping NightTrain will have something to say given his monster DIY trailers....
I am teetering on the brink of buying/building a cargo trailer. As I have no experience of using one I would appreciate your input.
Mandatory requirements:
1. Carry at least 1000Kg of sand/gravel/topsoil.
2. Bed size suitable to transport a ride on mower with dimensions 109x211cm.
3. Gravity tipper function.
Optional requirements:
4. Carry two 30"x8' oak logs (~1400Kg).
5. Ram tipper function (replaces 3 above).
6. Dual axle for greater stability.
I've been motivated to this position due to:
- A desire to buy landscaping/building materials at will;
- Being fed up with using an alaskan mill (hand-held) to process oak logs - now wishing to send them to a local sawyer.
However, these immediate motivations will be relatively short lived ie last no more than another two years whilst I renovate my property. After this, the trailer would be used infrequently to take my mower for blade sharpening, trips to the household recycling centre and the yearly horse hay purchase. Hence I have a dilemma, do I invest in a trailer or tolerate the inconvenience/cost of merchant deliveries and mower/sawyer collections? I'm not expecting you to answer that but my decision is heavily influenced by the cost-benefit trade-off of specific trailer types which is where I'd appreciate some guidance.
I believe that an 8'x5' Ifor Williams tipping trailer, http://www.iwt.co.uk/products/tippers/tt85ge.htm, ticks all the boxes but costs a ludicrous ~£2.5K. Going slightly more generic, a TipTek (http://www.trailertek.com/the-tiptek-tipping-trailer/) still costs ~£2K which still seems a bit OTT.
If I compromise on the tipping function, settling for this sort of thing: http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=150354891226 which I don't really know how to describe (gravity tipper? ie no ram) then that will cost ~£800. Is this style of tipper useless ie do you spend most of your time stood on it with a shovel?
If I were to consider a single axle trailer then are they impossible and/or too dangerous to tip by yourself?
I've looked into making a trailer but when you total the cost of a decent welding kit and all the equipment required for legal compliance then the ~£800 trailer above seems good value since I also save my precious time - but can you make a decent looking tipping trailer for less?
Finally, should I be less scared of buying a second hand trailer? It is not really the thought of buying a dud but the hassle of travelling to see incorrectly described items that puts me off. Sorry this turned into an essay.
Any advice most welcome,
C
P.S. I hoping NightTrain will have something to say given his monster DIY trailers....