What current tires do you have? Are they rated for the weight? The weight on the front of a deuce is nearly 7000#. The front springs will squat a bit from the Jeep. Phil2968 has a bobbed deuce with front springs and last year he toted a 3000# chunk of engine to the GA Rally and it flattened the heck out of his springs. M105 springs are nearly identical to the deuce front springs. If used with the subframe approach they have overload springs and wider stance. The highway rating for a deuce is 10,000# so the single axle is very capable of the 5000# payload but it's all going to hinge on your spring selection. What are your plans for a bed and how long is the Jeep?
I'm not sure of the specifics of the tires, but they are the factory super singles that were on the older Deuce Fire Trucks... I think they are 11.00 r 20's... if memory serves me right...
http://530B.letsgettwisted.com (if you want to see what I am starting with...)
I was thinking of building a bed that would allow the Jeeps tires to sit down into deep wells so I'm lower than the 12' Legal limit for Indiana... :0 It's kind of a tall Jeep!
The bed overall would weigh about 500 lbs... it would be very minimalistic with just treads for where the tires would need to sit. The Axle on the deuce would sit between the two Jeep tires, so that would probably mean I'd have a long bobbed deuce (I think the Jeep is 15 Ft, which if my estimation is correct, would put me needing to have the axle in place of where the current rear axle of the tandems would be... that may be too long for what I want in reality), IF I do it this way... I may end up just bobbing the deuce and planning on hauling the Jeep on it's own trailer instead. But I liked the idea at one time of the Willy's being on the back without a trailer... BUT I also like the idea of keeping the Deuce's suspension soft enough to be able to drive it on a semi daily basis unloaded if I want.
I am repowering it with a Fuel Injected 5.8 L (Ford 351 Windsor) and an Auto Over Drive tranny, so the front may end up being a lot lighter than a standard deuce...
SO, we know that a single axle CAN hold the weight I need given the right spring configuration... but physically, it may be work out to be longer than I want the bobbed deuce to be.... If it's going to be that long anyways, mis-well keep the dual axle setup and put a full rollback on it. :/
Thanks for the info! I think it has helped me a lot!
Neil