Sorry for the confusion due to my subject line. I meant 4x4 as in off road capabilities, not dimensions.wayne49 said:I was thinking "4x4 trailer, that won't hold much, how tall is it?"
rvwandering said:Welcome to the CRVL forums Nour! What would you like your title to say? I can change it for you.
Nour said:Sorry for the confusion due to my subject line. I meant 4x4 as in off road capabilities, not dimensions.
Nour said:Essentially what it says on the tin. Is a 4x4 or off-road cargo trailer worth the huge expense? I would be primarily boondocking with it, but do I really need 4x4? What are everyones thoughts on this?
Hi Nour,Nour said:Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts. This is very helpful.
Everything you have written is very true. Thanks.Spaceman Spiff said:I looked at off-road trailers a few years ago; these are my thoughts:
Four main differences from regular camping trailers:
- built sturdier; they have stronger frames to handle more pounding.
- they have an articulating hitch that gives more travel than a ball hitch.
- they have more ground clearance. Usually obtained with taller tires but sometimes with a trailing arm suspension setup that doesn't have a cross axle or both.
- they will have better thought out approach and departure angles than a regular trailer.
You need to decide what is important for the camping you do.
- Strong frames and build are good but you pay a weight penalty.
- Articulating hitches are for very twisting, undulating terrain. For most applications a ball hitch give enough up and down range.
- Having the same sized tires as tow vehicle give you as much ground clearance as said vehicle. Having the same wheel size and bolt pattern as tow vehicle is an advantage.
- Approach and departure angles are important and you need to determine how much you think you need and exceed it.
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