A tilt trailer adds a lot of extra weight, almost double the weight of the front half of the trailer. It is no problem if you don't care about weight, and certainly big trailers don't care,
but for something trying to be light, it is not a good design. It also doesn't solve the problem of doors that can't be opened. Let me add this is a big issue
with a low racecar which has a rollcage, as you really need to open the door to get over the side bars.
While I have no seen it done this way, the rotating torsion axle can solve this by rotating UP also, so the deck is cleared in the UP position.
In this case, I would not have to put the wheels under the deck. A worm-gear drive would be perfect to rotate the axle, since it could go both up and down,
and would not need any pins, or as you see with the Oz trailer, you must raise it a little to remove the load on the pins before removing them. I can see these pins as a problem.
The beauty of the whacky front loading trailer design is it just a regular simple no-moving-parts trailer that has NO added weight or mechanisms.
With the V shape in front, I can put hinged ramps on the angled part, and them will swing down to load/unload, and then swing up once loaded,
as this area of the trailer is always clear (which is where people put tool boxes, etc)
Now I hooked up my trailer today, and reminds me how painful it is using a regular hitch and ball when on a non-smooth surface, so with that style hookup, forget it.
I will have to try the pintle setup, but in any case, having a wireless electric scissor jack to at least make it easy to raise and lower the front would be great.
And new trailer lights, I lost one AGAIN today, and (so go ahead, call me careless). I think I have the solution.
I'm going to use side-view mirrors from a part explorer, as they can swing front and back to get out of the way, but hold there normal position well,
just replace the glass with the lights.