Trailer Repair

Mobile Trailer Repair in Murray, UT

A trailer can shut down a load just as completely as a dead tractor. Bad lights, air leaks, damaged landing gear, brake issues, or worn door hardware can all leave a trailer parked when it should be moving. Murray Mobile Truck Repair provides mobile trailer repair in Murray and throughout the Salt Lake Valley so carriers, owner operators, and local fleets can get trailer problems handled on site. Call 801-405-3445 for mobile trailer service at your yard, dock, customer location, or roadside stop.

We work on common trailer issues involving lighting and wiring, air lines and gladhand connections, brake-related complaints, landing gear concerns, door and latch problems, and visible wear around suspension and axle areas. Trailer faults often overlap with tractor-side problems, so we also inspect related systems when the complaint points that way. If needed, we can pair the service with DOT compliance checks, brake repair, or fleet preventive maintenance.

Dual rear tires on a semi truck jacked up for brake and axle service
Dual rear tires on a semi truck jacked up for brake and axle service

Why Trailer Problems Build Up Fast

Trailers in Murray work hard in short urban routes, freeway runs, warehouse shuttles, and winter conditions that are rough on wiring, air components, and moving hardware. A trailer may back into docks all week, sit loaded overnight, then get turned around for another route before anyone checks the little problems that are starting to stack up. That is how minor issues become no-go equipment.

A small air leak becomes a brake release problem. A lighting issue that only happens over bumps becomes a failed inspection stop. A landing gear crank that feels rough eventually binds when the load is still on the trailer. We see these patterns constantly around Murray, South Salt Lake, West Valley, and the industrial corridors feeding I-15 and I-215.

What We Inspect During a Trailer Call

  • Light function, harness condition, and connector issues
  • Air lines, gladhands, and trailer-side brake response
  • Landing gear operation and mounting condition
  • Door hardware, hinges, rollers, latches, and seals
  • Visible suspension, axle-area, and undercarriage wear
  • Signs of tire wear, brake heat, or wheel-end trouble

We look at the whole trailer because the visible complaint is often only part of the story. A trailer with repeated light failures may have a rubbing harness or bad grounding, not a simple bulb issue. A brake complaint may actually begin with air delivery or contaminated hardware. A door problem may point to body movement or repeated dock impact. The repair holds better when the cause is understood first.

Trailer Repairs We Commonly Perform On Site

Our mobile service is built for the trailer repairs that make the most sense in the field. We correct many lighting and connector problems, repair common air line and fitting faults, service door and latch hardware, inspect and address accessible brake-related issues, and evaluate landing gear concerns. We also handle plenty of smaller trailer problems that keep dispatchers from confidently sending the unit out on its next load.

For fleet customers, mobile trailer repair is especially useful because the trailer does not have to leave the lot for every issue. That saves time and keeps shuffling to a minimum. It also makes it easier to inspect multiple trailers during one stop if you are trying to clean up a backlog of equipment problems.

Warning Signs a Trailer Needs Attention Now

  • Trailer lights work intermittently or fail completely
  • Air leaks are heard near gladhands or trailer plumbing
  • Landing gear is hard to crank, unstable, or visibly bent
  • Doors do not latch, roll, or seal like they should
  • One axle area runs hot or shows fast tire wear
  • The trailer keeps getting passed over because no one trusts it on the next run

If the trailer is already costing dispatch time, it is time for service. Call 801-405-3445 and we will send a mechanic to inspect the unit where it sits instead of waiting for the problem to create a bigger delay later.

Local Trailer Service for Murray and Nearby Cities

We serve Murray, Salt Lake City, West Jordan, Sandy, Taylorsville, Midvale, Draper, and nearby commercial areas where trailers cycle through quickly. We understand warehouse access, yard conditions, and the kinds of tight operating windows local businesses work under. That matters because trailer repair is often not about a dramatic roadside failure, it is about keeping a usable trailer from becoming tomorrow’s emergency.

If the trailer issue connects to the truck itself, we can inspect that too. That includes related electrical concerns, brake supply issues, and maintenance items that should be addressed before the next load goes out. You can also ask about our truck electrical repair or fleet PM program during the same dispatch.

Call for Mobile Trailer Repair in Murray

Murray Mobile Truck Repair provides trailer service that is practical, local, and built around how real fleets operate. If your trailer has a wiring issue, air leak, brake concern, landing gear trouble, or hardware damage that is keeping it from service, call 801-405-3445 now for mobile trailer repair in Murray, UT.

Trailer Repair for Murray trucks and trailers

Murray Mobile Truck Repair handles trailer repair for commercial trucks, trailers, box trucks, work trucks, and fleet equipment across the Murray area. The goal is to identify what can be repaired safely on site, what needs parts support, and whether the truck can continue operating without creating a larger roadside problem.

What this service call usually includes

Service begins with location, access, safety, and symptom details. A driver or fleet manager should be ready to describe warning lights, recent repairs, leaks, air loss, brake behavior, tire damage, electrical faults, cooling symptoms, trailer connection issues, or no-start conditions.

Mobile repair situations we see often

  • Breakdowns at customer docks, yards, job sites, terminals, and highway shoulders.
  • Fleet trucks that need practical on-site checks before the next route.
  • Trailer lighting, brake, air, door, landing gear, and suspension concerns.
  • Diesel, charging, cooling, tire, and electrical problems that need field diagnosis.
  • Follow-up repairs after a driver notices a recurring fault or unsafe condition.

Helpful information before dispatch

Provide the exact truck location, unit and trailer numbers, whether the vehicle is loaded, gate codes, available working space, and any photos or fault-code information. Clear details help the mobile technician arrive prepared and keep the service call focused.

Trailer Repair for working trucks in Murray

Murray Mobile Truck Repair provides practical on-site support for trailer repair on commercial trucks, trailers, box trucks, work trucks, and fleet units. Drivers need clear expectations about what the call covers and what details to share before dispatch.

Every call starts with location, access, safety, and symptom details. A fleet manager or driver should be ready to describe warning lights, air pressure behavior, brake drag, tire damage, cooling loss, electrical failure, trailer connection problems, no-start conditions, or recent repair history.

Field diagnosis

The first step is identifying whether the issue can be handled safely on site, whether parts are likely needed, and whether continued operation would create a larger roadside or DOT problem.

Fleet and roadside needs

Calls may happen at a customer dock, shoulder, job site, terminal, warehouse yard, or fleet lot. Access notes, unit numbers, and loaded status help keep the response focused.

Truck and trailer systems

Common related systems include brakes, air lines, tires, lighting, charging, starting, cooling, aftertreatment, trailer doors, landing gear, suspension, and wiring.

Helpful information for the repair call

  • Exact truck location, cross street, dock door, gate code, or yard instructions.
  • Unit and trailer number, truck type, and whether the vehicle is loaded.
  • Photos of leaks, damaged wiring, tire issues, warning lights, or broken trailer parts.
  • Any recent work, recurring symptoms, fault codes, or safety concerns.

Clear information helps the technician prepare for the right kind of repair instead of treating every breakdown the same. If the situation is unsafe or the vehicle is blocking traffic, mention that first so the response can be prioritized appropriately.