Forum Discussion

avan's avatar
avan
Explorer
Jun 10, 2017

Base plate broke

I bought my current toad, used, about 3 yrs ago. It was already equipped with a Blue Ox base plate, proper wiring etc. and with a BO tow bar. The first year I replace the tow bar with new as the old one was 'loose' and BO (at the factory) deemed it nearly as expensive to replace all the badly worn parts as a new one. I should have paid some attention to the base plate but I didn't - didn't even really know what one looked like. Over the past 3 yrs, there have been no accidents nor even any 'bumps' to the front end of my car.

Fast forward to this past Monday. I'm traveling for the summer and stopped at the Walmart in Ellsworth, ME to shop. Load my groceries, do a quick walk around (habit) and start up the MH. Turn the wheel for a gentle right to get out of my parking spot and start going forward when there is a loud grinding, crunching sound. Check my camera and see the whole driver's side of the front bonnet of the car on the ground with the passenger side barely hanging on.

Fast forward a bit. Got the car to Ellsworth Collision. Base plate broken on the driver's side where the base bar makes the turn to attach to the frame which caused the base plate to twist and pull the front end of the car off. So I called Blue Ox and ordered a new base plate for the car to be sent to the collision shop overnight/morning delivery. UPS barely made it delivering it by 11:45 am and by 3pm Ellsworth Collision had it installed, all the wiring put back together (correctly) and the front of the car completely put back together without a scratch (less that $300 total labor). What a great job they did!!!

The point of this post. They showed me the broken base plate. At the point of the break, the length of the break was about 4" long and of that 4", 3 7/8" of the break was completely and well oxidized. The bright (non oxidized) metal along the break line was perhaps an 1/8 or 3/16th of an inch long. That bar had been broken for a long long long time with the car really being held by a very minimum thickness of steel. I am so thankful I was in a parking lot and not doing 65mph on a highway.

DO - when buying a used toad that is already set up, have someone who knows what they're doing (as in not a car dealer) inspect the integrity of the hidden from view base plate. DO always have a valid breakaway brake. Disaster may be only one dumb luck away.

16 Replies

  • j-d's avatar
    j-d
    Explorer II
    I'm looking at the install instructions. Where'd it fail, where one of the L-shaped end, meets the square tube cross piece?

    Dutch, the instructions show 36" permanent cables, wrapping around the square tube cross piece and what looks like a vehicle front cross member behind it.

    I noticed where Blue Ox calls out the height and spacing of the Attachment Tabs. This is VERY USEFUL in choosing a base plate that brings the tow bar closest to level with the draw bar on the coach.
  • j-d's avatar
    j-d
    Explorer II
    What Blue Ox baseplate number did you get as your replacement?

    We started out with a towbar and base plate outfit called Duncan. (On a historical note, Duncan had a patent on the first folding towbar, which was bought by the originators or Roadmaster.) The whole Duncan business was bought out by Automatic Equipment, better known to us a Blue Ox.

    Anyhow, one way or another, we transitioned to Roadmaster. Falcon MoHo mounted towbar, and Roadmaster baseplates on first our Nissan Frontier and now Toyota Corolla.

    This morning, after reading about two recent tow rig failures See "Hitch Pin Broke" I took an oath which I have just fulfilled: Inspect and Tighten Base Plates and Trailer Hitch. I'm sweaty but they're done.

    Please, from a safety and a Biblical perspective: Luke 10:37b: "Go and do likewise."
  • Dutch, don't know and since I'd never heard of those, didn't even think to ask the shop. Those would sure be add'l "insurance".
  • Just curious, but do you know if the original base plate had safety cables that attached from the base plate to the toad frame? These are not the same as the safety cables from the tow vehicle to the toad. At some point, Blue Ox started including those with their base plates, but I don't know when. The BO base plates I've installed since 2008 have all had them.
  • j-d's avatar
    j-d
    Explorer II
    avan wrote:
    DO always have a valid breakaway brake. Disaster may be only one dumb luck away.


    So Very Well Said!!!

    SO GLAD this wasn't any worse! Nobody hurt, no damage, not outrageously expensive, little travel delay!

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