Forum Discussion
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Apr 25, 2016Mwolfe450 wrote:
Wow. Thanks for all of the input. I haven't had time to mess with the setup, I am hoping to do so soon. I understand I am at or above the limits of the truck once the trailer is loaded. I towed it home empty, with nothing in it. So I towed an 8k trailer with a 950lb tongue weight trailer and it was bad. I understand weight capacities are glorified on trucks, especially 1/2 tons. I have towed 10k with the truck and had no complaints, but that was an open trailer, much different than a 32ft sail. I also feel some people have responded thinking the truck had no suspension left with the trailer. In fact, I felt it had way to much travel left for being at capacity. When I took some resistance out of the bars it certainly helped. Not sure of tires on the truck but they're oem goodyears definitely not e rated, I'll guess lt tires. Payload on the truck is 2060lbs. Yes that's including passengers which is less than 550lbs. So I have 1500lb carrying capacity being conservative in the truck. The trailer would generally be towed fairly light for small weekend trips and full hookup sites. The dealers setup had the trailer level to slightly nose up. I will set the hitch up according to instructions and nose the trailer slightly and re try it. Then I will add tongue weight and try again. Lastly I will hitch it up to a v10 250 and see how that is. will the 250 pull it better, absolutely. If I'm still not comfortable in the f150 I will get a different trailer. I guess my original question in my first post was what might make it so squirrelly empty? Would prowler sell such an unbalanced trailer? Or can a poorly set up hitch cause that much sway?
Setting up the hitch with the trailer being slightly nose high could be the source of the problem. Typically this is done to account for lots of squat, but if your truck doesn't have much squat when the trailer is hooked up then the tongue will remain high. The more tension on the bars, the higher the nose will go as it transfers more weight to the front axle. The higher the nose the less stable a trailer will pull. This would probably explain why when you backed off the bars things got better, but it didn't correct the problem completely. Just a theory, but after backing off you're still too nose high. Additionally it could be possible the bars do not have enough tension to make the sway control aspect effective after backing off. Just tossing out some ideas.
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