DHKpeWI:
Your questions, line of questioning, and the info. given here as a basis for our comment, does not bode well for a good trailer design. The AISC Steel Code and a few good texts on strength of materials, steel design and welding should be a good starting point for steel design in general, but they don’t really contemplate mobile equipment directly. I don’t think you will find any load criteria for mobile equipment (a trailer) in ASCE 7, and maybe you shouldn’t be taking on this project if you ask that question.
With a 20.3kip gross vehicle weight this will most likely be a tandem axle trailer. You have many choices for this type of running gear, you pick a package to fit your needs, and that will dictate a good part of your design. Their equip. should meet AASHTO bridge loading conditions and axle spacing, per their spec. sheet. Of course, this axle set can be overloaded, you design the trailer and locate the loads to prevent this. These kinds of loads are rarely uniform, in fact.
In your first post you say you are asked to design the trailer, and then in your next post you say you are going to review a very specific sized trailer. So, which is it, are you designing a trailer for these loads, or trying to put these loads on an existing trailer? A trailer constructed of 10 gage and 1/4" A1011 steel may not be the best choice for these types of concentrated loadings. I’m not sure I know what A1011 steel is, do you? You must design the frame or study the existing frame to take these fairly discrete loads at a limited number of load points. It’s one thing to haul 4000# of sand or brick, a fairly uniform loading; and quite another to secure a high C.G. 7200# generator or a sloshing fuel tank to a few discrete cross members on the trailer frame. That’s the real design problem. If you are starting from scratch, forget the 10ga., 1/4" and A1011 and use what you need for the job.
I’ve designed and built a lot of railcars, trailers and load handling equipment up to 700-800 ton capacity, much of this for the electrical and nuclear industries. I grant that these are exceptional loads and transport equipment. However, while your loads are pretty small, I have found that trying to fit special equip. to a trailer not designed for that equip. can be more work and more costly than building to the real needs, particularly when this sounds like it is intended as a dedicated trailer. Alternatively, at least, selecting a trailer better suited to accept your loads. Seems to me, your first task is to determine if an existing trailer is even fit for these loads and advise the client accordingly. To do a half baked job on a piece of dedicated equipment will make no one happy in the long run.
Good Luck