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Hey there just delete you wont need them with electricI'm about to lower my M1101 the 2.5" using the square tube, and do the hub swap like TexasTT did back on page 3.
With the hub swap it will be using electric brakes and the same wheels as my Land Cruiser.
What should I do about the surge brake setup and parts?
Hey there just delete you wont need them with electric
Well not sure what others have done. I kept the surge brakes. you could weld a tab on each side where the lunette ring slides in .those hitches are not quiet some have changed to a ball hitchThanks,
I am wondering how to hold the pindel so it doesn't slide in and out as it did with the surge brakes.
If I just delete the parts it's going to clank back and forth unless It is bolted in place somehow, what have others done for that?
yeah my thoughts too thanks take careThanks. Tabs I can do. I'm staying with the pintle for the articulation.
Hello there yeah i agree with the pintle statement. I did a 3in drop the only thing to deal with is the shock which really isn't much. I built an offroad camper on mine and these trailers will go anywhere . I wish i had three of these living in the northeast they are not easy to come by, cant believe i found the one i did.After towing my trailers with pintle hitches, vs the trailers I have with ball hitches, I'll take the pintle every time. I only notice any "clunking" from the hitch on the tightest turns when backing, or when the trailer is totally empty going over rougher terrain, and even then, it's not bad. My guess is that the backing noise is because we're using a 3" ring with a civvy pintle that was designed for a 2.5" ring... The military pintles are sized for the 3" ring, and in my experience, clunk less and don't bind a bit when backing like the civvy pintle does.
I can also get a pintle trailer hooked up easily with no rear camera, I just get it close, and correct a bit if I see the front of the trailer move to one side or the other as it makes contact. Once I get contact where the trailer doesn't kick to the side, I'm close enough to drop the ring on after the truck rolls ahead a bit when I put it in park. Only get out of the truck one time, vs. the normal several times when hooking up a ball hitch.
These trailers are great, and though I have three, and recognize that I really don't need that many, I can't bring myself to sell one because they just keep coming in handy. Currently using my covered trailer to store firewood...
And FWIW, I looked back and see someone did a 5" drop, which I like. Would have to chop the foot off the bottom of the jack at that point, but it would lower the trailer nicely. I honestly see no problem with only bolting the axle on the sides... Or, if you wanted, you could just weld it to the bottom of the frame, which I believe is steel, not aluminum. That is commonly done on RV's and other commercial trailers...
Finally, there was some question about the axle rating. I can confirm that the axles on my M1101 and my M1102 are tagged for 4300lbs. As someone pointed out, the trailers are identical, the weight rating difference was to determine which tow vehicle you were allowed to use. And a military trailer rated for 4300lbs offroad will handle a LOT more weight on road. Until the later 90's, the military typically set off road ratings at half the on road rating, or rather, doubled the off road rating for on road use. Not that I'd want to put 8000lbs in a M1100 series trailer...
I know this is a late reply but I just bought an M1102 and I want to consider this mod.
Q: The vertical sheet that the ends if the axle pass through (see pic #3), does all the material need to be removed?
It would be easier if only the axle slot needs to be cut out (and holes drilled).
Q: Without a plasma cutter, what is the best way to cut through that thick aluminum?
I used this thread to lower mine over the weekend. I also did a hub/brake swap.
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