Forum Discussion
JBarca
Jun 17, 2017Nomad II
Hi,
I just saw this post. I have some info that may help.
It seems you have worked your way through the receiver fix and you saw a great improvement, but there is still an issue that sounds like it is not as good as your older 2005 Burb.
I'll pass this along. Back in the 2006 time frame, a fellow RV'er found me for help on his new 2007 Suburban hitch setup as he was having a lot of wandering. This was the first year of new Burb with the redesign. He use to tow with his older 2004 1500 Suburban and this same trailer without issues. The trailer was in the 6,000# range with a 750# loaded TW.
When he came to my place, his WD hitch (a Reese trunnion bar WD hitch with the HP DC) was setup wrong. The camper was a lot nose high, and the WD was not close to right. He brought a new hitch shank I told him to get and we reset the entire WD hitch and reset the DC. The camper was now leveled out and we aired his tires up to max side wall pressure during the WD setp. Trailer tires are also up at max. He did not have the auto ride rear suspension, just standard shocks. Then we went for a test drive.
He commented the rig was a little better but still was not what he had on his 2004 Burb. Since I set the WD hitch myself, I knew this was good. And while I questioned the new bumper/receiver, for me it reacted well for setting the WD. At this point he did not have a lot of towing mileage on the truck before he came to me so there was not much worn on the truck.
I hopped in the passenger seat so I could look and watch things and we went for a test drive. This was back roads and only doing 20 to 30 mph to start with. Later up to 50mph. This truck acted like sog city going around a turn at 20 mph. I have had a 97 Tahoe, a 2002 Tahoe and a 2003 K2500 Suburan and none of them felt like the sog city going around that turn towing a camper. That is what he was complaining about. The whole truck was not stable.
The OEM tires are suspect for sure. Tire side walls can make or break a TV when using these high friction anti sway hitches. This sogginess was in a totally different league. The trailer did not change, the actual hitch did not change, the hitch shank needed to change to level out the camper with the receiver height change.
Now many years later, your post comes along. You change the receiver and you see a global shift better in stability. This much I can tell you, it is not the fact the receiver is higher and the need for a longer drop shank to level out the camper. The flexibility of the receiver itself may be more of this then before realized.
The tires I surmise is for sure still part of the problem. I never knew the tire size/brand of his older 2004 1500 Burb and the difference to the new 2007 tires. Do you know the size of your older ones along with the brand and the what is the brand and size of your 2013? I suspect the aspect ratio may be different and the tire brand/type is very different. The newer truck has a softer sidewall tire on it. The thing rides like a cream puff non towing.
I also have not crawled under a 2013 lately, does yours still have leaf springs or did they change that too to coil springs in the rear? The front end of the truck I believe went from torsion bars on the pre 2007's to McPherson struts on the 2007 and up. Can you confirm the front suspension too?
Hope this helps
John
I just saw this post. I have some info that may help.
L and J Waters wrote:
Okay. Original post here with my take-away. I bolted a Curt XD heavy duty receiver on my 2013 1500 Suburban. Overkill? Yes, but any other option required bolts near the center of the hitch. This setup has pretty much eliminated the sway I was experiencing. Back from an 800 mile outing last week and I can now confidently tow in heavy traffic. In other words, the tail no longer and wags the dog. I know a 1/2 ton vehicle is not ideal for towing, but that's a whole issue in itself. I've towed about 25,000 miles with similar setups. I knew this situation was not right when I got the 2013, but now feel much better. As I said before, the wife likes the Suburban and a low mileage 3/4 ton is not readily available.
The receiver(ordered for a 2005 Suburban) bolted on directly with no drilling. I did shim it down 2"(probably need 2 1/2" to completely clear the plastic bumper) and I used a custom hitch cover to hide the factory receiver. I am satisfied and would not hesitate towing long distance now. I realize this is non-standard, but it works for me.
L and J Waters wrote:
OP here again. Just got back from another trip of about 500 miles. Experienced some gusty winds this time and did move around some, but not like before. I guess I post this as my personal disclaimer. It's not perfect, but as I said, I would do a long trip now.
It seems you have worked your way through the receiver fix and you saw a great improvement, but there is still an issue that sounds like it is not as good as your older 2005 Burb.
I'll pass this along. Back in the 2006 time frame, a fellow RV'er found me for help on his new 2007 Suburban hitch setup as he was having a lot of wandering. This was the first year of new Burb with the redesign. He use to tow with his older 2004 1500 Suburban and this same trailer without issues. The trailer was in the 6,000# range with a 750# loaded TW.
When he came to my place, his WD hitch (a Reese trunnion bar WD hitch with the HP DC) was setup wrong. The camper was a lot nose high, and the WD was not close to right. He brought a new hitch shank I told him to get and we reset the entire WD hitch and reset the DC. The camper was now leveled out and we aired his tires up to max side wall pressure during the WD setp. Trailer tires are also up at max. He did not have the auto ride rear suspension, just standard shocks. Then we went for a test drive.
He commented the rig was a little better but still was not what he had on his 2004 Burb. Since I set the WD hitch myself, I knew this was good. And while I questioned the new bumper/receiver, for me it reacted well for setting the WD. At this point he did not have a lot of towing mileage on the truck before he came to me so there was not much worn on the truck.
I hopped in the passenger seat so I could look and watch things and we went for a test drive. This was back roads and only doing 20 to 30 mph to start with. Later up to 50mph. This truck acted like sog city going around a turn at 20 mph. I have had a 97 Tahoe, a 2002 Tahoe and a 2003 K2500 Suburan and none of them felt like the sog city going around that turn towing a camper. That is what he was complaining about. The whole truck was not stable.
The OEM tires are suspect for sure. Tire side walls can make or break a TV when using these high friction anti sway hitches. This sogginess was in a totally different league. The trailer did not change, the actual hitch did not change, the hitch shank needed to change to level out the camper with the receiver height change.
Now many years later, your post comes along. You change the receiver and you see a global shift better in stability. This much I can tell you, it is not the fact the receiver is higher and the need for a longer drop shank to level out the camper. The flexibility of the receiver itself may be more of this then before realized.
The tires I surmise is for sure still part of the problem. I never knew the tire size/brand of his older 2004 1500 Burb and the difference to the new 2007 tires. Do you know the size of your older ones along with the brand and the what is the brand and size of your 2013? I suspect the aspect ratio may be different and the tire brand/type is very different. The newer truck has a softer sidewall tire on it. The thing rides like a cream puff non towing.
I also have not crawled under a 2013 lately, does yours still have leaf springs or did they change that too to coil springs in the rear? The front end of the truck I believe went from torsion bars on the pre 2007's to McPherson struts on the 2007 and up. Can you confirm the front suspension too?
Hope this helps
John
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