AZjeff
$50 Site Donor 2023
In the beginning of December I was given this 4.5' x 8' trailer to get it off the property of the rescue I volunteer at. It looked pretty sad, I thought I'd probably just be taking it to the recycler. Turns out it's really stout and well worth getting back to usable condition. It's a Snowbear brand built in 2002 in Ontario. All of the sideboards and front and back gates should be removable but the front and sides were welded on. The front was welded crooked and I couldn't tolerate that so cut it off and repaired the attachment points to make it usable. Replaced wheel bearings, new wiring with trailer plug, replace the decking with some leftover Trex. It will need tires before heavy use. I ran red Scotchbright over all the metal to smooth off the rust then coated it all with some clear polyurethane to keep the patina. The tongue jack was all bent up so some creative leveraging and beating fixed that and the back gate was potato chip warped so more creative leveraging and bouncing on one corner got it back flat. No title and the VIN sticker is gone but going to DMV with a bill of sale this week to get that fixed. I've never owned a little trailer so interested to see how I like using it instead of the truck to haul stuff.
As acquired:
Rescue dog inspecting rescue trailer
Now:
You can stand on the fenders and taillight brackets:
How the front and back gates attach is interesting, that's a 1" solid steel rod bent at 45 degrees and welding into the gate frame. It slides into oval holes cut into the main frame and held with those pin/ring things. You can turn the gate 180 degrees and insert the rod and extend the floor the height of the gate. The gate that was welded on must have bounced out of the holes and gotten dragged, one of the rods was missing and the other was ground away 3 inches at an angle.
The back main frame looking down at 45 degrees where the 1" rod goes.
As acquired:
Rescue dog inspecting rescue trailer
Now:
You can stand on the fenders and taillight brackets:
How the front and back gates attach is interesting, that's a 1" solid steel rod bent at 45 degrees and welding into the gate frame. It slides into oval holes cut into the main frame and held with those pin/ring things. You can turn the gate 180 degrees and insert the rod and extend the floor the height of the gate. The gate that was welded on must have bounced out of the holes and gotten dragged, one of the rods was missing and the other was ground away 3 inches at an angle.
The back main frame looking down at 45 degrees where the 1" rod goes.
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