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Trailers

Tell us about your rides. Daily transportation or your baby. Tell us about them and show them off.
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BrokenolMarine
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Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 9:09 am

When we first moved to Oklahoma, we bought a Kubota Tractor package. Tractor, and implements. Included in the package was the "Orange" brand trailer to move the tractor back and forth for service, etc. It's an 18' tandem axle deal, with side rails and ramps stored in the sides of the trailer. Sturdy, nice trailer. Never a problem.

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Well, one issue. The Zero Turn mower we bought would drag the deck going onto the trailer making the transition from the ramp to the trailer deck unless we loaded by parking the trailer strategically on a slope so the mower was running nearly level across the ramps. :roll: A couple years ago, we looked at a custom trailer dealer and he gave us a good price on a custom 12' dovetail trailer that also worked really well for the Polaris Ranger. We didn't have to haul the 18' trailer made for the tractor when we took the Ranger in for Service. :D

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Things were looking good, right up until the 2 door Ranger died, and we upgraded to the 4 door Ranger when we replaced it. The four door wouldn't fit on the Dovetail trailer. The other issue? The rails on the Orange were just about four inches too high to allow the doors to open on the Ranger when it was centered on the deck of the trailer. I was too wide to squeeze thru the narrow opening that allowed. Had to park to one side a bit to SQEEEEEEZE out of the door. We were considering modifying the rails on the 18' trailer before the next run for service on the Ranger.

When you don't sleep well, you have plenty of time to think, and I starting thinking about all the downtime on the two trailers. We used them about once every twelve to eighteen months. :roll: Why not sell them both, put the money away, and have the equipment picked up and delivered when it needed service? Or, sell them both and buy a single trailer to fit our needs. I discussed it with Miss T and she agreed. No need to have them both sit a year unused. They were like new, nothing wrong.

She saw a dealer ad online and sent him a message regarding a 20' carhauler he had on special. Trade? She sent pics. We had the two on line for sale. He said come see him. We did.

New Old Stock:

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Nothing wrong with this one, fits our needs. He was pleased as punch to find that our trailers were just as advertised. Other than the decks bleached by the sun, not a scratch on them, lights worked, and tires barely worn. His was the same. New, but on the lot for a year. Win/Win for both. The good thing about Oklahoma is private trailers aren't registered, so we didn't have to worry about tags or registration.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 9:10 am

The new trailer will haul the tractor and bush hog, the UTV and the doors will open, and the mower with no problem. Sweet.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

HenryFan
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Re: Trailers

Post by HenryFan » Mon Mar 30, 2026 9:28 am

BOM -

Keep an eye on the tires. Most trailers, at least those I have bought and I currently have five, were delivered with chinese time bombs. At about five years or so, consider replacement even if the tread looks good. Also, the tires on new trailers may be older than the manufacture date of the trailer itself.

Unfortunately, unless you are willing to spend quite a bit more to buy Goodyear Endurance tires, chinese tires are the most economical choice.

In any event, it looks like you have resolved any trailer conflicts you may have had.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 9:58 am

We aren't afraid to spend the money for decent tires. We have always felt good tires and brakes are important. You have all that weight and power, with that small contact with the surface.

I remember a friend complaining his AWD was worthless in the snow. He had street tires on it. When I pointed that out, he said those ALL weather tires were noisy, so he had them changed.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

HenryFan
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Re: Trailers

Post by HenryFan » Mon Mar 30, 2026 10:29 am

BOM -

In 2024, I was transporting a tractor with a bushog attached and I blew out a tire on an 20' double axle equipment trailer. It was my fault to some degree because I failed to check tire pressures before loading the trailer but even though the trailer sat under a tractor shed, the tire that failed was on the side that got the most sun in the afternoon/evening. Not too long after that, I sold that trailer and a Kubota MX4700 to a neighbor and he soon had a tire blow out on the same side.

It is rather unscientific but I speculate sun is had on chinese time bombs. At least such has been my experience.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 11:22 am

We might move the trailer more into the shade. If we replace the carport for the Titan, it has been our intent to move the old carport down to the pasture area to park the trailer under. ;)
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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Hatchdog
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Re: Trailers

Post by Hatchdog » Mon Mar 30, 2026 12:43 pm

That’s a good looking heavy duty trailer. My first car hauler (for the tractor) was like this one without side rails which made both strapping and opening the Ranger doors great. I didn’t like the two narrow loading ramps. I have my rear tires on the tractor set as wide as possible and when using the narrow ramps I would have a half front tires on the inside of the ramp and half the rear tires on the outside of the ramp. I felt it was a disaster waiting to happen. I found the same trailer with a reinforced full width loading ramp on it so sold the first one and bought the replacement from a guy in Montana. But this one has side rails which make opening the doors on the Ranger difficult as you said. But I sure love loading the tractor on it!
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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 1:38 pm

That lift out side rail would be a solution to the problem. That's really slick. Take the rail out, load the Ranger, put the rail back in for structural integrity, tie 'er down... Boom.

We are good with the car hauler. My daughter just bought a new (to her) twenty year old jeep. A V8 wrangler that was rebuilt. Has all the receipts. Once the guy was done, he got bored, decided it was time to do a frame off restoration of a 56 Chevy. So, sold his Jeep.

"Car Hauler? Great, if my new Jeep dies, you can come get me."

"Don't leave the state, no tags. It's legal here, but we'd get stopped every twenty miles in Texas."
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

rickhem
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Re: Trailers

Post by rickhem » Mon Mar 30, 2026 6:09 pm

Those are some nice looking trailers, all of them. Funny how this stuff turns into a near necessity. Lots of good info from this thread too. It'll help with a couple upgrades to existing equipment when the time comes.

Been driving smaller trailers for years, mostly small trailers for aluminum fishing boats, and a small box trailer for a job I had. About five years ago, we got a nice Big Tex 35SA-10, with the round tubes. It's a stout little trailer, and I've used it for bringing our 6x4 Gator around. Bought it because it's wide enough to move the 455 with the 60" deck on it, but haven't had that mower on it yet. The trailer has been loaned out just as often as I've used it, and it tows really nice.

A couple years back we bought another used Gator, an 855D S4, and used the 35SA to bring that home. That Gator is about 12 feet long, which never occured to me until we were already there trying to load it, and it didn't fit. I thought the wheelbase would work on a 10 foot trailer, but not even close. We ended up with the Gator loaded backwards, back tires strapped to the tubes on the front of the trailer, and front tires still out on the ramp. I used some heavy ratchet straps to pull the ramp up to just above level, tied a couple fluorescent orange microfiber rags to the corners, and took all back roads the whole way home. Sketchy doesn't even begin to describe that. We made it though, took almost 3x longer than getting there, and I won't do that again.

I've got some other equipment now, and will probably be needing a better trailer to move it, should the need arise. My 3520 probably goes about 3000-3500 pounds, so a trailer that can handle that would be the objective, and something much longer. Everything else will fit on a trailer that can handle the 3520. Another issue is the tow vehicle. My truck has got two tires in the junkyard, and the other two on banana peels. It's always something.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 6:59 pm

Towing isn't always the question people should be concerned with, it's "stopping."
We used to see it a lot with both boats and horses.

"No problem at all, she's a Turbo Six Jeep, she can pull 'er."

Then, come the first long downhill with a stop sign, or a deer jumps out, and the load pushes the jeep or light SUV. When we looked at boats, we knew we could pull what we were considering with the Titan, and stop it. With the horse trailer, we added brakes to the trailer requirements. :D
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Mar 30, 2026 7:00 pm

Yes... The new car hauler has 'em.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

HenryFan
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Re: Trailers

Post by HenryFan » Tue Mar 31, 2026 8:10 am

Some years back, the son off a close friend and a couple of the son's buddies pulled a rather large boat from Florida back to South Carolina with a Jeep Wrangler and later, either had the transmission replaced or rebuilt.

I have a Ford F250 which I don't use too often since I can drive my old Toyota Tacoma cheaper but when I pull my current equipment trailer, I sure don't use the Tacoma. The F250 has a brake controller and the equipment trailer has electric brakes, which I consider an absolute requirement for pulling an equipment trailer loaded with a tractor and an implement.

Craig Boddington, the writer and former Marine Corps officer, says "Use enough gun". HenryFan says "Use enough truck."

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Hatchdog
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Re: Trailers

Post by Hatchdog » Tue Mar 31, 2026 10:43 am

BrokenolMarine wrote:
Mon Mar 30, 2026 6:59 pm
Towing isn't always the question people should be concerned with, it's "stopping."
We used to see it a lot with both boats and horses.

"No problem at all, she's a Turbo Six Jeep, she can pull 'er."

Then, come the first long downhill with a stop sign, or a deer jumps out, and the load pushes the jeep or light SUV. When we looked at boats, we knew we could pull what we were considering with the Titan, and stop it. With the horse trailer, we added brakes to the trailer requirements. :D
Yep, I hear that from time to time. She can pull er’. It’s very mountainous here in my neck of the woods and stopping is a huge factor.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Tue Mar 31, 2026 12:39 pm

We'll see people pulling huge boats with a Ford Explorer. (Or similar sized vehicle.) You know they can't stop that boat, even if the trailer has brakes. Surprised they could pull it out of the water, more surprised the boat didn't pull the Explorer into the lake. If you watch some of the boat ramp you tube videos, you'll see exactly that happen. If the ramp has the least bit of slime on it, they either can't pull the boat out, or the backward slide begins and they are lost... truck and trailer goes under.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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BrokenolMarine
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Re: Trailers

Post by BrokenolMarine » Tue Mar 31, 2026 12:41 pm

HenryFan wrote:
Tue Mar 31, 2026 8:10 am
Craig Boddington, the writer and former Marine Corps officer, says "Use enough gun". HenryFan says "Use enough truck."
You betcha! 8-)
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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BrokenolMarine
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Trailer for the Mower

Post by BrokenolMarine » Mon Jul 13, 2026 11:22 am

We have to haul the Mower in for some service we can't do. Last month we changed the blades, changed the oil and filter, the air filter, etc. But, the Zero Turn wheels are hydraulically driven and it's time to service the hydraulics. This requires a lift we don't have. The new "car hauler" is something like 22' long and the ramps aren't made for the little mower, which we didn't expect to have to haul. :?

We looked at the trailers from the big box stores, and Miss T hates the little narrow wheels and tires on those and the quality of the trailers they offer are not that great. We called our guy we got the dovetail from and he had a nice little 5x8 in stock for about the same money with much better quality, 15" tires and a spare, and longer ramp. SOLD

I picked it up on the way back from OKC where I had gone for a visit to the V.A. Hospital. I spent an hour or so yesterday adding SOLAS tape accents to the sides and rear gate. SOLAS is highly reflective and allows you to be SEEN and avoid accidents. The tape on the side will hopefully insure the car that wants to cut in behind you will see the small trailer you are hauling and not sideswipe it.


new spartan hauler with solas.jpeg
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The rear gate will fold flat inside the trailer as well. so you can load a pallet of material into the trailer from the rear.
We'll get some use from this one. Can haul it around the farm with the UTV, and haul it around town with the Frontier. The big trailer will still haul the UTV and the Tractor behind the Titan.
You can tell a lot about the character of a man...
by the way he treats those who can do nothing for him.

I don't look back at the things I can no longer do, I just look forward to the things I still can.

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Hatchdog
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Re: Trailers

Post by Hatchdog » Tue Jul 14, 2026 9:41 am

That’s a good looking trailer. Nice it has a swivel tongue jack. Some people don’t think about that and find that their tailgate won’t open fully as it hits the jack handle. Good looking bed too.

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Sir Henry
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Re: Trailers

Post by Sir Henry » Tue Jul 14, 2026 9:56 am

BrokenolMarine wrote:
Mon Mar 30, 2026 1:38 pm
That lift out side rail would be a solution to the problem. That's really slick. Take the rail out, load the Ranger, put the rail back in for structural integrity, tie 'er down... Boom.

We are good with the car hauler. My daughter just bought a new (to her) twenty year old jeep. A V8 wrangler that was rebuilt. Has all the receipts. Once the guy was done, he got bored, decided it was time to do a frame off restoration of a 56 Chevy. So, sold his Jeep.

"Car Hauler? Great, if my new Jeep dies, you can come get me."

"Don't leave the state, no tags. It's legal here, but we'd get stopped every twenty miles in Texas."
I face the same problem with my teardrop not needing plates in Wisconsin. What i did was buy a look-alike plate on Amazon with my trailer number. Out of state police see I have a plate and leave me alone.

Oh and nice new trailer.
Hi, my name is Gene and I'm a Henryholic from Wisconsin.

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