Westonium said:
His solution? Bought a 16'x8' trailer with very heavy duty axles (mobile home axles I think).
My parents and brother are all planning on moving out here from California. My dad found this 24 foot enclosed trailer for $3,000 that he thought would work perfect for moving. It has three moble home axles and is basically the box off a bobtail with a frame under it for the axles.
They loaded it up with my brothers stuff. He doesn't have allot compared to most. He's never owned a house, so it's just tools and furniture for a small place, but they filled it up. I flew there to help out and drive one of there vehicles back. The weight of the trailer was incredible, but my dad was pulling it with his RV. It has a turbo cummins 8.3 and he said the trailer felt very heavy to him. No way could you pull it with anything less. We made it to Needles when the first tire blew up and destroyed the axle. We replaced the axle with a 7,000 pound one we found in Bakersfield.
That lasted all the way to Tuscon when lug nuts started to break and the tires came off again. New lug nuts and we're back on the road. The trick was to stop every 200 miles and re-tighten the lug nuts.
Here in Texas we replaced the other two moble home axles. They are total junk. NEVER buy a trailer with them. Dad learned the hard way.
Steph and I used it to get her stuff our of storage in Birmingham, WA this past August. I pulled it with my F-250 truck and was way underpowered. Just pulling it empty was a nightmare. Every semi that passed us would push us sideways!!!
We loaded it about half full and it wasn't nearly as heavy as when my parents brought it out, but my top speed was in the 50's.
If you buy a trailer, be sure you can haul what you put in it and that it's not a nightmare waiting to happen. Swaping out axles in the Majave Desert really is a terrible experience!!! hahaha
Good Luck,
Eddie