BarneyS wrote:
No Ron. You are reading more into what I said than what I intended. All I was trying to say is that the force on the ends of the spring bars remain the same. If they remain the same, does the receiver bending upward reduce the weight transferred to the front axle or not?
I am not trying to split hairs here, just trying to get it clear in my head what you are trying to say. What you posted just does not compute in my mind.
Barney, let's go back to what Ben said in
this post.
BenK wrote:
If GMT800 (2000-2006), then the receiver should be replaced with a proper one. The OEM receiver bends and consume WD forces. So it DOES NOT transfer as much weight to the front axle as a traditional receiver would with the same WD spring forces
If the bars attached to the "OEM" receiver (assumed less "stiff") and the bars attached to the "traditional" receiver (assumed more "stiff") are loaded to the
SAME "WD spring forces" the WDH will transfer the
SAME amount of load to the front axle. The difference is that the rear end of a bar attached to the less stiff receiver will have to be lifted higher above its initial unloaded height. If the bars attached to the less stiff receiver are lifted high enough to experience the same amount of load as the bars attached to the more stiff receiver, there will be no difference in load transfer. That is contrary to what Ben
is saying
was saying a couple pages back
.
BarneyS wrote:
It sure seems to me that, if you want to transfer x amount of weight, and you draw up the bars using x amount of links, and the receiver bends upwards x amount, you are going to have to raise the bars even farther with x+ links to get x amount of weight transfer as opposed to a receiver that does not bend upwards when WD is applied.
Is my thinking correct? I agree with your statement in blue text which seems to me to be in agreement with my thinking.
Yes, we are in agreement (except I think it would be "x-" rather than "x+" links under tension). That's essentially what I said a few posts back -- except I added increased rearward tilt as another means of compensating for receiver rotation.
The whole point is that the less stiff receiver
CAN transfer the
same amount of load as the more stiff receiver as long as you do not exceed the yield strength and as long as you can increase rearward tilt and/or reduce number of links under tension. If the bars are loaded to the same "WD spring forces" they
WILL transfer the same amount of load.
Ron
On Edit: I didn't notice the post by Ben a couple posts back. The text in
blue
above replaces the text in
red
.