Bike trailer advice

Chairmanmo

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Morning all.

Wondered if anyone uses a bike trailer (for the kids, like) and can offer any advice? I have the Halfords own-brand one and the Bellelli one (don't ask how I've ended up with two...) and I take my three-year old to nursery in one or the other three times a week. About 5k round trip and he weighs about 17kg.

The issue is this: I've been using my modern-ish (2008) Rockhopper to do this donkey work but I'm not sure it's doing it any good – three broken spokes in six months (butter-soft alloy nipples to blame, I reckon!) and now the BB has developed a lot of play. So I'd rather not use that for it if possible.

So, I've been debating using my 1995 Orange P7 to do the towing as it's famously a pretty bulletproof steel frame and it's going to be a lot cheaper to replace an older non-disk wheel if I need to. However, firstly it just feels a bit like sacrilege to use the P7 for such menial chores and, secondly, I really, really don't want to put undue stress on the frame and damage it.

Anyone got any experience of trailers screwing up frames/wheels? And does anyone know of any way of bolstering the connection? Like swapping the QR for a bolt-on axle for example?

Any advice greatly appreciated!

Thanks
 
I have run trailers with MTBs and touring tandems for 6 years while my kids were small. The load on the wheels is minimal. I think you just have an unfortunate coincidence.
We ended up touring on a loaded tandem with child trailer and never had any problems with QRs or wheels. The worst thing you can do is fit a nutted axle as the axle will be in tension rather than compression. The compression from the QR stops cracking.
 
Think of the extra weight on the wheel - it's that you feel when lifting the hitch with the kids in it...maybe 2-5kg?
Also, the twist load on the bike is all taken up by the universal joint on the hitch - again it's minimal.

Standard manufacturers' wheels are machine-built and don't seem to last well - get them rebuilt by your bike shop and you will probably have no further problems.
 
Another vote for crappy machine built wheel here. I've pulled my kids bike trailers (Burley De'lite and a Chariot Cougar) and had no problem with frames, wheels or seat posts. I've also towed trail-a-bikes too. I found the spokes they used in the OE wheels on my Kona Dew were atrocious. I was snapping a spoke 3 - 4 times per year. I put on some better quality wheels - still probably machine built - from my LBS and haven't popped a spoke in two years of riding on them.
 
I always knew that wheel was crap. Some lunatic on an electric bike ploughed into the back of me (I was stationary) at some traffic lights a couple of years ago so I marched her to the nearest bike shop and made her buy me a new wheel there and then. It wasn't what I would have chosen at all but never had any problems until I started pulling the trailer. TIme for a new rear wheel now methinks. Something a bit better!!

Thanks for all the advice.
 
I have a Bumper Explorer trailer which while not being the lightest is totally bullet proof.
Have towed it for about 3 years behind mostly elderly GTs and occasionally a Carrera hybrid with no probs.
It might be that I've spread the wear between bikes but I have done quite a bit of mileage and my 16plus stone and daughter, trailer, junk, shopping etc hasn't done anything to the wheel.

Zaskartrailer.jpg
 
Chairmanmo":pe6gi7az said:
I always knew that wheel was crap. Some lunatic on an electric bike ploughed into the back of me (I was stationary) at some traffic lights a couple of years ago so I marched her to the nearest bike shop and made her buy me a new wheel there and then. It wasn't what I would have chosen at all but never had any problems until I started pulling the trailer. TIme for a new rear wheel now methinks. Something a bit better!!

Thanks for all the advice.

Is it worthwhile to rebuild the wheel with good quality spokes and nipples?
 
hamster":30tr3vo0 said:
The worst thing you can do is fit a nutted axle as the axle will be in tension rather than compression. The compression from the QR stops cracking.

This is interesting. I use a very heavily laden trailer for camping. It uses a hitch like the one below.
Screenshot_2014-03-01-09-39-24-1_zps3e76fc99.png





With a nutted axle I can get it tight enough so the hitch stays in Line with the trailer (3 o'clock). With a quick release gravity pulls the hitch down to '6 o'clock'. That is a particular problem as there is a pin that goes through the hitch and so when at 6 o'clock the trailer arm (which has a sort of sprung hinge) is bent like an elbow. I'm sure this puts the hinge under too much strain.

I asked at my LBS and they said they advise against quick release wheels with trailers.

But it sounds like I might be risking the frame (or wheel?) using a nutted axle?

It's always a worry being 20 miles into the French countryside and knowing that if the trailer goes we're going to have to find a taxi! So any advice will be much appreciated! :D
 
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