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#1
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Last week I noticed a growing hump in the floor over the axle of my Komet
trailer. Investigating, I found cracked welds where the axle attachment subframe is welded to the lower longerons of the welded steel truss that makes up the sides of the trailer. The rear welds on the subframe had failed on both sides of the trailer allowing the subframe to rotate upward putting the hump in the flooring. There were also cracks in the longeron itself. Had this failure continued, it appears that the axle would have been shoved up into the wings leading edges. The cause appaers to be the old rubber torsion suspension axle had harded with age so it no longer absorbed the road bumps. This transfered the loads to the welded frame which then failed. The repair will require removing a section of aluminum siding from the steel frame and a section of flooring over the axle area. The frame will need re-aligning and reinforcements welded in. The old rubber torsion axle will also need replacing. I looked at several other Komet trailers of the same vintage this weekend and saw various stages of same failure. If you own an older Komet trailer, carefully check the welds around the axle. If the old rubber torsion axle has 15+ years on it, it might be a good idea to replace it before the welds fail. Fortunately, they aren't too expensive - $150 - $200. Bill Daniels |
#2
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This is a common problem with older Komets, at least those that have
been wheeled across the U.S. for many tens of thousands of miles (mine was a 1978 that failed after 13 years). Symptoms and repair are as noted. Early warning is the hump in the floor that causes the wing to wobble as it's pulled out of the trailer and the spar dolly rides up over the bump. I was able to gain access from above/below for the welding by drilling out relatively few pop rivets and bending/propping up a section of the wooden floor. This is a different problem than the one of the rubber torsion spring failing and allowing the trailer to settle on the axle a few inches, although several of the symptoms are the same (i.e., less axle/longeron and tire/fender clearance). I've never heard of it happening on a Cobra trailer, leading me to wonder if it's really related to hardening of the rubbber or just failure of welded steel joints. Cobras I've seen are all aluminum; I don't know if early ones were steel tube. Now is also a good time to check the welded attachment of the tube that retains the trailer tongue. The front attach point on mine failed and the tongue pivoted on the rear attachment, allowing the front of the trailer to sink down until it came to rest on the brake actuating rod, applying the brakes. Fortunately neither the brake shoes nor the bearings were destroyed, although the smoke pouring off the wheels was pretty impressive. That smoke was the only real trouble indicator since the trailer continued to track very nicely (although if I'd been real observant, I might have noticed in the rearview mirror that it was a few inches lower in front). Note that the tongue itself can be in excellent shape even when the mounting tube is failing. You have to go inside the trailer and look under the forward mounting attachment to inspect it. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" |
#3
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... This is a common problem with older Komets, at least those that have been wheeled across the U.S. for many tens of thousands of miles (mine was a 1978 that failed after 13 years). Symptoms and repair are as noted. Early warning is the hump in the floor that causes the wing to wobble as it's pulled out of the trailer and the spar dolly rides up over the bump. I was able to gain access from above/below for the welding by drilling out relatively few pop rivets and bending/propping up a section of the wooden floor. This is a different problem than the one of the rubber torsion spring failing and allowing the trailer to settle on the axle a few inches, although several of the symptoms are the same (i.e., less axle/longeron and tire/fender clearance). I've never heard of it happening on a Cobra trailer, leading me to wonder if it's really related to hardening of the rubbber or just failure of welded steel joints. Cobras I've seen are all aluminum; I don't know if early ones were steel tube. Now is also a good time to check the welded attachment of the tube that retains the trailer tongue. The front attach point on mine failed and the tongue pivoted on the rear attachment, allowing the front of the trailer to sink down until it came to rest on the brake actuating rod, applying the brakes. Fortunately neither the brake shoes nor the bearings were destroyed, although the smoke pouring off the wheels was pretty impressive. That smoke was the only real trouble indicator since the trailer continued to track very nicely (although if I'd been real observant, I might have noticed in the rearview mirror that it was a few inches lower in front). Note that the tongue itself can be in excellent shape even when the mounting tube is failing. You have to go inside the trailer and look under the forward mounting attachment to inspect it. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" Thanks for the details, Chip. As an update, I have the trailer opened up. The lower longerons were nearly cracked through on both sides which would have left only the upper longerons holding the trailer together. Total failure was only a few miles away. I caught it just in time. BTW, the tounge was replaced with a MUCH stronger "A-Frame" hitch by a previous owner. It turned out to be easier than expected to bend the axle mounting sub-frame back into position with six foot 2x12's and large C-clamps. I straightened and aligned the trailer with jacks and welded the longerons and sub-frame with an oxy-acetylene torch. I am thinking that the metal will be re-normalized by the heat. The next step is to borrow a MIG welder to add substantial reinforcements. E-mails from the axle manufacturer (Flexride) indicates that a 10 - 15 year life is all that can be expected from the rubber torsion axles before the rubber is "hard as a rock". No surprise there that a 26 year old axle could break a trailer frame. So far, I have a couple of evenings into the project and $0. Bill Daniels |
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