Trailer Axle Beam with Easy Grease Spindles – 95″ Long – 6,000 lbs
Original price was: 374.00$.280.00$Current price is: 280.00$.
- 2 years warranty
- Delivery time: 1-2 business days
- Free 90 days return
Description
Description
Trailer Axles
- 6000 lbs
- 95 Inch Hub Face
- Spindles Only
- 80 Inch Spring Center
- No Drop or Lift
- No Hubs
- Leaf Spring Suspension
- etrailer
- Easy Grease Spindles
Round trailer axle beam measures 95″ from hub-face-to-hub-face (when hubs – sold separately – are mounted) and 80″ from spring-center-to-spring-center. Easy Grease spindles make it easy to lubricate bearings (sold separately).
Features:
- Round axle beam acts as part of your trailer’s suspension system
- Replace an axle on your trailer
- Fabricate a suspension to fit your application
- High-strength steel construction
- Bend in axle creates zero camber angle for even road-to-tread contact across the width of your trailer’s tires
- Best for straight-line acceleration and steady, controlled towing
- Underslung design – spring seats welded to underside of axle for mounting leaf springs (sold separately)
- Low ride height makes it easier to load and unload your trailer
- Straight, Easy Grease spindles – no drop
- Patented welding process prevents spindle failure with 40% stronger welds
- Built-in grease zerk for simple lubrication
- Spring seats and spindles are welded on
- CSA, QAI, and SAE-N certified
- Lifetime technical support from the experts at etrailer.com
- Made in the USA
Specs:
- Weight capacity: 6,000 lbs
- Hub-face-to-hub-face length: 95″
- Spring-center-to-spring-center length: 80″
- Axle diameter: 3″
- Spindle/hub compatibility:
- Bearings: 25580 inner, 15123 outer
- Seal: GS2250-DL, inner diameter 2.25″
- Limited lifetime warranty
Axle Dimensions
There are multiple ways to measure the length of an axle beam, but the hub-face-to-hub-face and spring-center-to-spring-center lengths are the most accurate. Hub face (A) refers to the length of the axle measured from the base of one wheel stud to the base of the wheel stud on the opposite side of the axle (when hubs are mounted on the beam).
The spring center (B) is the approximate width of your trailer. It is measured from the center of the spring seat on one side of the axle to the center of the seat on the other. This axle beam comes with the spring seats welded on.
If you are replacing your trailer’s axle, you should be able to figure out which type you need by determining your trailer’s capacity, the bolt pattern of your wheels, the brake type and the aforementioned lengths.
Each axle is manufactured to create a certain camber angle. This ensures that the angle of the wheels is correct for your towing needs. Because the primary concern when towing is maintaining controlled, in-line movement, each axle is made so that your trailer’s tires will run along the pavement evenly, with contact across the width of the tread. The result is excellent straight-line acceleration for steady, in-line tracking. You might notice the bend near the center of the axle; this is what ensures the proper camber angle. Having the center ride a bit higher and the sides of the axle bent lower allows the axle to give just enough to compensate for the load.