QUOTE (Phillip @ Jun 18 2009, 06:28 PM)

My axle was doing this /--\ so ...
I took my lil egg to a small local trailer manufacturing company which had never worked with a lil egg before ...they measured and while they were doing that I made a cardinal mistake, I mention that I had read where someone had used a Dexter #9 on a little trailer.... it was a boler... (I'm betting they have a FLAT TRAILER) to install these axles you must turn the around backwards... He checked it out and ordered one ...
The initial problem was possibly that they had never worked on an egg before and the guy doing the measuring was not the one to weld the axle on.
I looked at a lot of frames and axles before deciding what I neeeded for mine. Most of our trailers have a portion of the floor which drops below the frame in the kitchen area to maximize interior head room. If one is changing the axle direction from leading to trailing, or even just swapping an axle the key is measuring. Many of our trailers have axles that were made 30 years ago by someone other than Dexter. The measurements may differ. The same can be said for the frame. If you think about it, just because it is an egg, it does not necessarily mean that it is going to have the exact same frame over all these years.
To get an axle to fit just right either as a straight swap or while "spinning" it, one may have to tinker with frame modifications, mounting bracket height, arm length (some manufacturers offer different sizes), start angle and even tire/rim size. The key is to research, measure and plan.
My axle swap post explains everything I had to consider in changing axles. If in doubt, there is a lot of experience on this board.