Saturday, Jun 29, 2019 at 11:42
If the wheels, bearing, brakes, axles, springs and tyres are rated correctly, I think you can run any weight you want on a single axle. The real issues are
suspension design and weight distribution.
Modern caravans all seem to go for independent trailing arm
suspension which gives excellent tracking, but a very low roll centre. This causes additional body roll which can lead to instability if you get a pendulum thing happening. It also proves very poor load sharing for dual axles, unless they are running connected air bags on each side, like on the Bruder and the
Kimberley Cruiser.
Putting a lot of weight at the ends of the caravan increases the pendulum effect (called yaw or polar inertia) which, with a low roll centre, can cause real stability problems.
Kimberley (bless their liquidator) used to put anti-roll bars onto their caravans for this reason.
A single axle frees us a lot of space in the caravan and will reduce weight by maybe 100 kg. It also does less track damage because there is no scuffing of the tyres on tight bends. The down side is increased ground pressure, which can be overcome by using larger tyres and dropping pressures when on sand.
IMHO, the best
suspension for a single axle is a solid axle with either long,
well designed leaves properly damped, or a four or five link setup, like on the back of most 4WDs. This gives a much higher roll centre. Add good dampers and bags for a great ride.
For what it's worth, here's what I've put on my build:
Keith
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