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dpgllg's avatar
dpgllg
Explorer
May 23, 2018

Dodge Ram 5th wheel hitch prep

Hello,

I looked at a new Dodge Ram 2500HD today that came with the 5th wheel hitch prep. From what I can tell this involves 4 holes to mount the rails but it had one center hole as well. It also included the pin box to connect the pigtail up in the box of the truck.

The salesman said it will save time and money as everything is there except the hitch.

Does anyone have this feature and what does it really mean to me? What is required to mount a 5th wheel hitch? The holes looked pretty big.

Also if I'm going to get a new hitch what is the easiest AND safest hitch out there today? My current hitch can be difficult to pull the lever to get unhitched. I have some weakness from a stroke and would be looking for something a little easier to use if one exists.

Thanks!

Dave
  • BEST standard hitch on the market is pictured above. Simple solid NO question if you are hitched. No issue with hitching or unhitching when at an angle or RV and TV are on different planes.

    BTW it's a RAM, been so since 2013.
  • A picture frame is not required - in fact you don't need one at all. Fifth wheel hitches are made specifically to fit into the puck system. You have to specify the vehicle manufacturer since they are not standard across brands. Look at Etrailer.com

    Clicky

    A picture frame might come in handy if you have a newer truck with the puck system, and an old fifth wheel hitch that needs rails to mount it - although I'm no expert on the subject - others will chime in I'm sure.



    I recently bought the slider version of the B&W Companion pictured, and I'm very happy with it - very easy to operate.
  • The four holes are the "puck" system which uses a Picture frame that the hitch fastens to. The center hole is the gooseneck prep.

    If you look down in the holes you will see that they are rectangular cut, the picture frame has four matching pins which drop into those rectangular holes like a skeleton key. Each pin has a handle and is rotated 90 degrees and locks in place, that keeps the pin from coming up out of the hole.

    The actual hitch attaches to the picture frame. There are different manufacturers and styles that use the puck system. Here is one example.

    I used the factory picture frame and an superglide automatic sliding hitch because I have a short bed truck and a 102" wide flat front old style FW.

    Some FW have rounded front ends so some choose to not use a sliding hitch.