I found an aluminum Continental trailer near me that might work for our Voyager. It has plenty of capacity at 8500 lbs, but of course it has some issues worth pondering. For example:
1) The trailer was used in salt water and has sat outside its entire life of 8 years. The finish on the aluminum is looking dull. Is the aluminum on these anodized clear or is the material bare? I'm wondering if I can bring back the luster.
2) The trailer has no brakes or actuator. I like this because it gives me the opportunity to put exactly the brakes I want on the trailer. Of course this raises questions:
- disk or drum? I'm leaning towards drum because my experience has shown they are less prone to problems especially if I get galvanized components. I will only be using in fresh water.
- I know many people will say to put brakes on both axles, but our boat is the lightest configuration at about 5600 lbs and I would like to keep maintenance to a minimum, so one axle. What size drum/disc would I use?
- I know electric brakes are more consistent, but I really don't want to screw with outfitting my truck on top of the trailer. Another negative for electric is that only a truck set up for electric will work.
3) Lastly, price. I can get a new Load-rite with LED' s, radials, guides, discs on one axle, 8400 lb capacity with set-up out the door for about $4500. I'm thinking the above trailer is only worth $2k at best.
Thoughts?
Thanks
1) The trailer was used in salt water and has sat outside its entire life of 8 years. The finish on the aluminum is looking dull. Is the aluminum on these anodized clear or is the material bare? I'm wondering if I can bring back the luster.
2) The trailer has no brakes or actuator. I like this because it gives me the opportunity to put exactly the brakes I want on the trailer. Of course this raises questions:
- disk or drum? I'm leaning towards drum because my experience has shown they are less prone to problems especially if I get galvanized components. I will only be using in fresh water.
- I know many people will say to put brakes on both axles, but our boat is the lightest configuration at about 5600 lbs and I would like to keep maintenance to a minimum, so one axle. What size drum/disc would I use?
- I know electric brakes are more consistent, but I really don't want to screw with outfitting my truck on top of the trailer. Another negative for electric is that only a truck set up for electric will work.
3) Lastly, price. I can get a new Load-rite with LED' s, radials, guides, discs on one axle, 8400 lb capacity with set-up out the door for about $4500. I'm thinking the above trailer is only worth $2k at best.
Thoughts?
Thanks