| Axle Removal
The old axle drops out rather easily,
but be prepared and have all the parts you need
on hand. A little pre-task exploration will
tell you the condition of the hangers, shackle
links, bolts and eye-end bushings. The
old axle was 2 1/4" square solid steel, the new
axle is 3" round tube, stronger and lighter.
4 
 
The old hanger bolts were cut off
- too rusted to unscrew the nuts. Jack stands
hold up the trailer - lots of room to work now! Info
on rebuilding the shackles follows later.
Axle Installation
 
I ordered a 5000# rated
axle from Axis.
Hub to hub dimension on my trailer was 79 1/2" which seems
to be standard on this era trailer, but measure yours. You
need to get the hanger bolts. The
Axis axle comes with a built-in brake wire to run to the
other side - a nice feature.
 
The backing plates and
then the hubs go on. I got the Easy-lube option with
a zerk fitting in the spindle tip that injects new grease
into the bearings without having to remove them, so
you can annually repack the bearings without disassembly.
 
Completed installation
with the skid hoop and lower shock mounts bolted to the
leaf spring assembly with hanger bolts.

The 2 1/2 "of extra height
looks fine, and makes
tire changing much easier. The wheel well close-out brackets
and edge trim will get added later.
- click on any image to enlarge -
Shackle Repair
 
The left picture shows the
two types of bushings encountered. The upper bushing is a
new spring steel and the lower is a new bronze bushing usually
found in the eye ends. All are for 9/16" shackle bolts,
and vary only in the OD of the bushings. The originals
here had worn through, or were severely elongated.
On the right is the completed
aft shackles with new links and "wet" (Zerk fitting greaseable)
shackle bolts. |