I saw Kyle's update and figured its probably time I post an update of my own.
We went up to Bar Harbor, Maine couple of weeks ago and the trailer made it's second trip. I didn't have much time to get lots of the details done, and I had to sort of rush some things. But the trailer worked out pretty well for this trip.
Here it is partially loaded and attached to the Suburban that we rented to haul the 6 us up in 1 car.
Night before we left, I realized that I had forgotten to mount the spare. I didn't want it inside the trailer, nor did I really want to mount it on the cap or roof of the Suburban. so I came up with this.
There is a small plate under the wheel. Grade 8 1/2" threaded rod, locking washers/nuts underneath to keep from backing out while driving down the highway. The wheel in that place gave me 10" of clearance with the trailer attached to the 'burban. The Suburban is LOW... My truck next to it was much taller. So I had to flip my receiver just so that the trailer wasn't too slanted.
Had picked up this bottle opener on our last trip to Watkins Glen, NY. Mounted it to the side of one of the boxes. It came in handy!
Tongue box is not the neatest setup and will most definitely get an overhaul, but it was functional. 24 gal water tank, Camp Chef Triton water heater, FloJet pump (hard to see, bottom left under the heater), deep cycle marine battery, and 1500w power inverter. Again, not clean by any means. Wired the trailer for 7 pin plug to charge the battery while towing. The battery was actually bad and only lasted 1 day. Luckily, we were near a Walmart where I picked up a new one that lasted most of the rest of the trip, only needed to be charged once.
One of the side boxes. I used this one for the stove and all other "kitchen" pieces.
Here is the side table/sink before I finished it. I painted it and covered it in spar urethane to waterproof it. These pics also show the sink without the drain. Used a stainless steel serving tray and a small bathroom sink drain. Hooked up a length of drainage hose and ran it away from our feet at the camp site. Table folds in half and stows inside the trailer very nicely. Set up, it slides into a piece of 2x4 steel tube that is bolted to the bottom of the side box. You can see the tube and the locking bolt in the first couple of pics in this post. You also see how the heater folds up and is ready for use.
And to finish it off... I wanted to keep track of all the places where the trailer goes, so I pick up a sticker from each place.