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KeninAZ's avatar
KeninAZ
Explorer
Sep 04, 2016

Towing my car with a trailer

I want to take my little Miata roadster with me traveling.
It only weighs in at some 2400# so it's pretty light.
I see most trailers support 7000# with the tandem axles.
My rig hitch is rated for 500# of tongue weight and some 5000# of total weight so I should be able to tow without a problem. I see most of the trailers are under 2000#.
I assume that you determine your own tongue weight by balancing the car?
If you were going to do it would you have a solid deck either of wood of steel?
  • carringb wrote:
    Your Miata would fit an an all-Aluminum UTV trailer. Polaris sells a nice one, as do many local trailer builders.

    I've had all three materials for the decks. I like AL the best because it doesn't rust. I'd pick steel 2nd. I don't like wood because the point loading on the deck causes those spots to soften first, and eventually a wheel will break through. Plus wet wood has the worst traction, and the paint just doesn't last long.

    For balancing, you could a 4x4 spanning between a block and a bathroom scale, with the tongue at the mid point. Then double the scale reading .

    The Miata is a well balanced car, so loading it just barely forward of center (mid point of car vs axle center) should pretty much be perfect. You can go as low as 8% tongue weight with a car trailer, since the moment of inertia is less than a TT. Kinda like boats.

    So,if you put, say 400 lbs on the rear of your tt, do you re-weigh the tongue weight? (of tt}
  • tegu69 wrote:

    So,if you put, say 400 lbs on the rear of your tt, do you re-weigh the tongue weight? (of tt}

    I sure would!
    Barney
  • Triple check as others have said, that the car will drive onto the trailer. I too have a beavertail, and like the wood deck for frost and snow in the great white north. (Lived in both Maine and Michigan), plus when you find the sweet spot, nail 2 small pieces of 2X4 and you can load right the first time every time by yourself. Do not make them too long, so you get the left and right correct too. Hitching up is harder.

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