Andrew Leigh
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 17, 2003
- Messages
- 431
Hi
anyone use rubber suspension axles in favour of standard axles with leaf springs? The rubber suspension is in the cross member of the axle.
Although they are more expensive than the standard axle I can get one from a friend who had one on his caravan. He bent the one swingarm and insurance replaced the entire axle. The axle has only 1600 miles on it and the manufacturer will replace the swingarm for me and reset the tow and the camber. In real terms this will mean a brand new axle for 25% less than buying just the normal axle (without springs). I am unsure if there are any advantages / disadvantages having an axle like this in and out of freshwater.
It is braked and rated for 3300lbs which is 7.5% over what I need. Plus it allows me to fit bigger tyres (14" rather than 13") as the load rating of the current tyres is not sufficient.
Any thoughts?
Cheers
Andrew
anyone use rubber suspension axles in favour of standard axles with leaf springs? The rubber suspension is in the cross member of the axle.
Although they are more expensive than the standard axle I can get one from a friend who had one on his caravan. He bent the one swingarm and insurance replaced the entire axle. The axle has only 1600 miles on it and the manufacturer will replace the swingarm for me and reset the tow and the camber. In real terms this will mean a brand new axle for 25% less than buying just the normal axle (without springs). I am unsure if there are any advantages / disadvantages having an axle like this in and out of freshwater.
It is braked and rated for 3300lbs which is 7.5% over what I need. Plus it allows me to fit bigger tyres (14" rather than 13") as the load rating of the current tyres is not sufficient.

Any thoughts?
Cheers
Andrew