[Shop-talk] Fw: Trailer storage idea
eric at megageek.com
eric at megageek.com
Thu Oct 20 18:10:17 MDT 2016
Jeff, thanks for the reply. I do have one of the wheeled dollies. The
problem is with a dual axle trailer, (and mine is pretty heavy) there is
no hope at all to turn it by hand. I use a hitch ball mounted on the end
of the forklift tine to push the trailer in place.
Sent from my Commodore 64 on a 2400 Baud Modem.
Eric P
"Be as beneficent as the sun or the sea, but if your rights as a rational
being are trenched on, die on the first inch of your territory." Ralph
Waldo Emerson
----- Forwarded by Eric Petrevich/Megageek on 10/20/2016 08:08 PM -----
From: Jeff Scarbrough <fishplate at gmail.com>
To: eric at megageek.com
Cc: "shop-talk at autox.team.net" <Shop-talk at autox.team.net>
Date: 10/20/2016 06:45 PM
Subject: Re: [Shop-talk] Trailer storage idea
Eric,
I don't know the details of how the trailer is maneuvered with the
forklift, but we had a "walker" for our travel trailer to fit it into
a tight storage spot. I can't find a picture, but it was like two
upside-down soup bowls connected on the top (bottom of the "bowl") by
square tubing. In the middle of the square tubing was a hitch ball.
A long pole fit in one end of the tubing. By manipulating the pole,
you could walk the two bowl "feet" and maneuver the trailer.
And then there's the two-wheel gadgets, like this:
http://www.etrailer.com/Hitch-Accessories/MaxxTow/MT70225.html
Still need to go to all that trouble? Can you stick one corner where
it will end up, put a jack stand under it, and use a jack on the other
end to swing it in place?
Jeff Scarbrough
Corrosion Acres, Ga.
>
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