tx2sturgis said:I don't question lengthening the trailer tongue (I've done that myself) but narrowing the axle?
I assume you know that means either a deck-over design, or major modification of the frame. Either way you would lose stability.
There is a good reason that the narrow, leaf-sprung, single-axle, trailers all have wheel tracks that are wider than the body of the trailer.
Yes I question the stability of my plan also tx2sturgis, and understand it requires major frame modifications and a New axle.. But all I'm doing is converting a 7' wide trailer with outboard wheels and fenders, to one with no fenders, and wheel wells inboard similar to 8' wide trailers. They don't make them like that but I have a trailer builder who is working on a custom trailer quote.
The modification wont make it more difficult to pull, but would definitely be more likely to roll over in a hairy emergency situation. The trailer is only 6 1/2' tall though.
I want to lengthen the tongue to make room for a >200 gallon water tank. Knowing this would overload the original design, I would add two new full length frame rails inboard of the new wheel location. The fabrication will take place after I remove the original axle and the trailer is sitting flat on my garage floor.
Bad idea? I drive a full size 4x4 which is over 7' wide at the mirrors. Body is 6 1/2' wide . I simply want to be able to drive narrow forest service roads mainly, and the trailer not be wider than my truck and match my truck wheel track. I think fenders, along with flat roofs, are a way for trailer manufactures to make them cheaper.. Not safer.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EfP81q2XqnY