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Member
Posts: 9
Location: Anna, TX | What is this called? I am looking at a CM trailer for sale that has this. Heads are pointing forward, but on the curbside of trailer, rather than the normal road side.Anyone know if horses have issues traveling this way? |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 736
    Location: Western WA | Never heard of that configuration. What is the benefit vs a standard slant load?
The only alternative I've heard of is a reverse slant, where the horses face backwards but the head is still on the left/drivers side.
I was taught that slant load trailers are configured the way they are to place the majority of the weight on the left side of the trailer (front legs bearing more weight than rear legs). Was told that due to road crown, trailers track better with more weight on the left than right. When pulling a straight load trailer, was always taught to put the heavier horse on the left, or a single horse on the left. |
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 Elite Veteran
Posts: 659
    Location: Rayne, LA | I have a friend that ordered a trailer with the escape door for the stud stall on the rump side ( curb ) instead of the head side for the convience of him accessing "his stall". This pushed back the axles which added a lot of tongue weight. He now wishes he had the stalls slanted to the curb side which would have left the axles in the proper place and the really only other change would have been the slant on the LQ wall. |
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Expert
Posts: 1723
    Location: michigan | I have seen this kind of trailer once. It didn't seem to matter to the horses. They simply loaded up. I can't see how this would be a issue for a horse. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 322
   Location: Fort Madison, Iowa | I have one horse that prefers to travel that way. In the past I had major loading issues with this horse and worked with a trainer on making him better. While with the trainer he's flipped himself out of the trailer, stitches in his leg, head etc. so major issues. I now have no problems with loading him. I ask him to go in and he turns around and parks himself next to the divider and travels backwards. He's happy, I'm happy. |
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Extreme Veteran
Posts: 402
    Location: Valentine, NE | Starting to see a few of these. Tuff Cooper had an interview last year somewhere that he prefers this. His reasoning is that horses have less stress as they do not see on coming traffic, and his pulling rig has the exhaust on the driver's side. I have heard that you want them facing the crown on the road, but IMO, this is an old wife's tale. To me, it really wouldn't matter, but might jeopardize resale as this is not the "norm".
Edited by Spin Doctor 2012-12-31 4:22 PM
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