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<blockquote data-quote="DrWazzock" data-source="post: 9208599" data-attributes="member: 2119"><p>Our old small bale trailer was a two wheeler built by grandad using a bus axle and the original wheels and tyres. Tyres were worn out and one was much “softer” than the other no matter what pressure you put in them. The result was it would always lean heavily to the right hand side no matter how carefully you’d built it and it made reversing between the hay shed pillars particularly difficult with no mirrors. We had to put up with that damn thing for years. Dad always made us overhang half a bale width on the bottom layer to get more on as well. There were quite a few calamities in rough gateholes where you’d see it bounce from one wheel to the other before shedding half the load off to the right hand side, passengers and all.<img class="smilie smilie--emoji" loading="lazy" alt="🤣" title="Rolling on the floor laughing :rofl:" src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/joypixels/assets/6.5/png/unicode/64/1f923.png" data-shortname=":rofl:" /></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DrWazzock, post: 9208599, member: 2119"] Our old small bale trailer was a two wheeler built by grandad using a bus axle and the original wheels and tyres. Tyres were worn out and one was much “softer” than the other no matter what pressure you put in them. The result was it would always lean heavily to the right hand side no matter how carefully you’d built it and it made reversing between the hay shed pillars particularly difficult with no mirrors. We had to put up with that damn thing for years. Dad always made us overhang half a bale width on the bottom layer to get more on as well. There were quite a few calamities in rough gateholes where you’d see it bounce from one wheel to the other before shedding half the load off to the right hand side, passengers and all.🤣 [/QUOTE]
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