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My impression, having towed many glider trailers over the years, is
that trailers where the heavy wing roots are at the front of the trailer tow better than those where they are at the back. This is irrespective of nose weight and number of wheels, and would make sense in that such trailers would have a smaller moment of inertia behind the car. The disadvantage is that (assuming the axle is in the right place for weight balance) you have a greater overhang behind the wheels, so are more likely to sideswipe things when manoeuvring in tight situations. Accurate alignment of the trailer wheels and using the correct springs and dampers for the weight of the trailer are also important. One four wheel trailer I used to tow was known to have a slightly bent front axle stub after an argument with a stone gatepost and was a bitch to tow. Derek Copeland On Nov 5, 3:14*pm, Andy wrote: On Nov 4, 9:09*am, Eric Greenwell wrote: glider wrote: My 18M ASH 26 E Cobra trailer has the 1300 kg (2870 pounds) Al-Ko axle, which is adequate for even an Open Class motorglider like the Nimbus 4M a friend has. Al-Ko offers the same style axles up to 8000 pound capacity, but I don't know what capacities Cobra offers. I suspect the major reason for choosing the dual axle trailer is for more stability. -- *I have a big *heavy trailer for a vintage two place. The trailer had dual axles and would sway at normal cruise speeds. Add a lot of weight in front and it made no difference. Increase tyre pressure and still no improvement. *Converted to single axle and problem is solved. Do you have a guess as to why it's stability improved? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" atwww.motorglider.org I can imagine why people think a dual axle would be more stable but this was never my experience. I found when my dual axle trailer got pushed off line (as by a passing 18-wheeler) it was slightly more persistent in trying to shove the car around - I suspect because it wanted to keep going where the dual wheels were pointed. I recall more shimmy-ing and vibration, but never more stability. The only change I've ever made to the whole vehicle-trailer system that improved stability was to get a heavier vehicle with a large tire contact patch and a short distance between the rear wheels to the ball (in my case a VW Tourareg). That made a huge difference - I've never had the least amount of sway towing - all the way up to 105 mph. (No, I don't tow that fast normally). My two generations prior tow vehicle (a VW Scirocco) actually got spun around backwards by a glider trailer on straight dirt road by a 20 mph tailwind. The vehicle and trailer is a dynamic system - so the sway characteristics are determined by the combination. Given the long moment arms and significant rotational inertias of a glider trailer, I believe the biggest stabilizing force is the way that rotational inertia is transmitted into the tow vehicle and how the tow vehicle's weight, geometry, suspension and tires damp it all out. I've never found changing tongue weight or the number of axles to have anything but minor effects on stability. Since glider trailers are more alike than they are different when compared to other types of trailers I suspect you can find out a lot about what works by talking to glider owners with different tow vehicles more than different trailer configurations. 9B- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
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