Backyard's M416 Overland Trailer Build!

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Enthusiast III

443
Rochester, MI, USA
First Name
Wayne
Last Name
Adventurer
With 2 days to spare I finished the trailer just before we planned to leave in our vacation. Had 3 friends help me out the tent on the rack then took it out for a test drive. She towed great. 75mph no problem as long as the roads are smooth.

We went to CO for 2 weeks. The first few nights were in a little canyon on the Poudre River outside of Fort Collins. We got to relax and do some fishing. Caught a bunch of rainbows.

Then we went into RMNP as we had a a backcountry permit for 2 nights.

Then we headed to the San Juan mountains in the SW and did the Alpine Loop. That as incredible. Proud to say the trailer went up and over Engineer & Cinnamon Pass.

The trailer o performed great. The water system worked and 21G was perfect. My 11 lb propane tank was plenty for our meals. The actuators worked as they should and gave me no issues… wished they were a little faster at times lol but no big deal.

One thing I noticed that I will adjust over winter is my fender to tire clearance. Once the trailer was loaded up I lost a bit of clearance and I want at least a 1” more.
On the rough trails the brackets I made for the telescopic tubing / tent rack wasn’t as sturdy as I would like. I made them out of .125” and they need to be thicker. Will probably have some lasered out of 3/8” and be done with it.
Also want to add an awning of some type.
So those are my projects to come.
 

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WinterfellJK

Rank I

Contributor II

124
Denver, CO, USA
First Name
Jon
Last Name
Denver
Really nice trailer build!
I'm beginning on a similar build this winter for my M100 and using some of your ideas for inspiration. How was the CG of the trailer handling off road obstacles on your CO trip?
My tent and awning will be near 300lbs on a frame about as high as yours, so I'm curious if you had any close calls with rolling it, or if you had to be more careful when driving in the rocks than just trusting the trailer would follow anything the Jeep would get through?
Do you have anything heavy mounted under the frame to keep the weight lower, or was everything inside the tub?
 
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Scout

Rank V
Launch Member

Pathfinder I

1,798
Jamestown,NY
Member #

3609

Awesome work. Trailer turned out great..Unfortunatley, I parted ways with my trailer earlier this summer. I figured that everything I wanted to use the trailer for would fit in and on our '66 Scout.. Why bother with another registration and inspection if it wasnt really needed...
 
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Enthusiast III

443
Rochester, MI, USA
First Name
Wayne
Last Name
Adventurer
Really nice trailer build!
I'm beginning on a similar build this winter for my M100 and using some of your ideas for inspiration. How was the CG of the trailer handling off road obstacles on your CO trip?
My tent and awning will be near 300lbs on a frame about as high as yours, so I'm curious if you had any close calls with rolling it, or if you had to be more careful when driving in the rocks than just trusting the trailer would follow anything the Jeep would get through?
Do you have anything heavy mounted under the frame to keep the weight lower, or was everything inside the tub?
.
Thanks I appreciate it. The CG was fine. The big thing I came into was I was very cautious on the alpine loop and there was a lot of traffic...nobody else was towing anything out there so everyone was faster than us. No big deal but I was constantly pulling over for people to pass me. I never thought I was going to flip it but there were some tight switchbacks and uneven areas of trail that definately took a careful line and going slow to go over. Hit some really strong winds a few times and that was the only thing that made me slow down the highway.
 
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Enthusiast III

443
Rochester, MI, USA
First Name
Wayne
Last Name
Adventurer
I finally took the time to finish the video of our first trip to CO using the trailer. I liteally had the trailer done 2 days before we left. We had a great time exploring some new areas such as the Poudre river / canyon area. Backcountry hiking in RMNP never gets old chasing trout. Exploring the Alpine Loop and surrounding areas was a blast!

I also have had time to reflect to go over some things on the trailer. Which means I am also shopping for a more versatile welder that can handle thicker metal. Some items I plan to update over the winter are the following:

Beefier brackets for the telescopic tubing
raised or improved fenders for more tire clearance
add a possible 270 awning
Possibly move the power station to the tongue box...but that would require a new tongue box and create a snowball effect of change...