Dwight Harley
Well-known member
Everyone agrees that you should check the hubs at each stop to see if they are hot. I will ask a dumb question.....suppose they are hot? What's the next step other than let them cool down?
My average hunt trip is 50 miles each way. The longest tow i ever did with my duck boat was 2200 miles. I put new bearings in the hubs, fresh tires, made sure the lights work, and carried my trailer emergency box in the back of my truck. The kit consists of a hydraulic jack, 4-way lug wrench, spare loaded hubs { with bearings and grease} spare tire, miscelaneous tools, extra bearing grease, rags and hand cleaner, and of course a couple of big yellow ratchet straps. The ratchet straps will hold almost anything together in a pinch, kind of a poor mans welder. I have two setups for my two traillers which each have different size tires and bearings. I also cary one of those infra red heat senser guns so when I am drowsy from driving I know exactly how hot my tires and hubs are, not just guessing. On that long trip I started out real easy, a I gained confidence and saw that my tires and bearings were not going to go up in smoke I eventually ran with traffic at 75 or so for the rest of the trip. My road kit sounds like a bit of an over Kill but I have seen lo many broke down trailers on the interstate that I promised mself I would never be helplessly stranded like so many of those poor souls. Rich
Rich Scheffler opened a good point about submerging axles...
I make it a point to keep my axles out of the water at all times...
Each season when I pull them apart they look like new...My
rig is setup as a winch on rather than a drive on rig...Mount your
lights high for visibility and the side benefit that they are never
submerged ... fenders are the sleeping dogs of trailer...keep the
rig in good condition , you should be fine ... I'm
waiting for a thread named trailer nightmares...I'll
bet there are some real horror stories out there... good luck...