Member III
How it rides has more to do with spring rate than the type of suspension. The spring rate also helps dictate when and if a wheel will leave the ground and how much the trailer will tilt when traversing rough terrain. I have had all types and my trailer with the long, wide soft leaf springs rides better than all the rest by a long shot. I would also say it has the lowest spring rate of all of them. Trailers don't articulate, its virtually impossible without the opposing forces you get with a four wheeled vehicle, so articulation on a trailer is basically fiction. I have yet to see an indepent suspension or torsion axle on a trailer ride anywhere near as nice as my teardrop. I am not saying independent isn't a good and a well engineered design, I just can't get into that camp from the 10's of thousands of miles I have driven with all types. The long soft leaf design is the way to go IMO. That 3500lb axle tube can take a pretty good beating as well.trailers don't follow exactly where your rig does, your rigs axle is much stronger, and can handle scraping on things a lot better. your rig will articulate a lot more than your trailer will. If you're doing hardcore wheeling with a trailer, it's a no brainer independent will be better for it. Handles bumps FAR better as well. where a solid axle rig will articulate to keep tires on the ground over uneven terrain, a solid axle trailer will not. independent will allow it to stay more even, and less chance of tipping, less strain on the hitching mechanism, the list goes on and on. also not everyone runs the same size tire on their trailer. I wont be. I will only have 31.7" tires on my trailer. so my clearance will be a lot less on the trailer.
that being said, I'm putting a solid axle under mine. as the pros of independent don't outweigh the pros of a solid axle for my application. They each have their place. It's about finding what works for you.