Suspension on a light-duty trailer looks crude — a stack of leaves, a shackle, a hanger welded to the frame. It is also the single most consequential system for ride quality, tire wear, and frame longevity.
This guide reflects what we see in our shop in Elkhart, Indiana, working on light-duty trailer axles up to 10,000 lb. We don't service over-10k commercial axles — that's a different specification regime — but everything below that ceiling lives in our daily wheelhouse: utility, boat, snowmobile, cargo, motorcycle, ATV, and small enclosed trailers.
What springs actually do
A leaf-spring stack stores energy on impact and returns it to the wheel. Over time, leaves take a set, the eye bushings wear, and the trailer rides lower than it left the factory. Most owners don't notice until tire wear gets uneven or the trailer rides noticeably lower.
Common failures we see
Number one is hanger ovaling — the bolt hole in the frame hanger wears into a slot. Number two is bushing collapse, especially on rubber bushings without grease ports. Number three is the broken main leaf, almost always at the eye.
Replacement scope
If you are pulling springs, replace shackles, bolts, and bushings as a kit. The marginal cost is small and the labor is identical. Reusing old hardware on new springs is the leading cause of repeat shop visits.
Torsion axles
Rubber-torsion axles eliminate springs entirely — the suspension is internal to the axle tube. They ride beautifully when new and are maintenance-free, but they do wear out (typically 8–12 years) and the entire axle must be replaced when they do.
Fall 2025 note
Fall is the smartest service window of the year. Get ahead of winter while the shops aren't slammed. If your trailer hasn't been through a real inspection this season, now is the right time to bring it in. We schedule preventative service ahead of the busy travel windows precisely so customers don't get stuck waiting two weeks during peak season.
When to call us
Most of what we cover above is owner-level work. The line we draw at the shop: anything that involves the spindle, brake hydraulics, axle replacement, or a suspension change that touches the frame, we'd rather do ourselves. Bearings, brake shoes, lights, jacks, couplers — those you can do at home or bring to us, your call.
Axle Inc. is the area's authorized Dexter Group distributor and we stock parts for trailer axles up to 10,000 lb. If you have a trailer in that range and you're in northern Indiana or southern Michigan, call (574) 264-9434 or schedule online at axle.setmore.com.
Axle Inc. Service Team
60+ years of combined trailer experience. Authorized Dexter Group distributor, Elkhart, IN. We answer the phone.
