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backing up to the hitch

3ares
Explorer
Explorer
My hitch is a automatic Pullrite for shortbed trucks
To help me backup to the 5er hitch:
1) I put alignment marks on the hitch to center it
2) I put a white mark on the center of the hitch that is visible from the truck
3) Put a white mark on the center of the pin box
4) on the back window of the truck I put two red marks 1/2 inch apart dead center
5) align all white marks inside the red marks; your good to go
2016 F250 Super Duty 4x2 Crew Cab XLT
6.7 Power Stroke
6 Speed Transmission
3.31 Electronic Locking Axle
Pullrite 16K Super Glide Hitch
2012 Sundance 275 RE XLT Fithwheel
39 REPLIES 39

Allworth
Explorer II
Explorer II
Too much thinking! Not enough camping!
Formerly posting as "littleblackdog"
Martha, Allen, & Blackjack
2006 Chevy 3500 D/A LB SRW, RVND 7710
Previously: 2008 Titanium 30E35SA. Currently no trailer due to age & mobility problems. Very sad!
"Real Jeeps have round headlights"

rhagfo
Explorer III
Explorer III
valhalla360 wrote:
rhagfo wrote:
valhalla360 wrote:
djgarcia wrote:
3ares wrote:
My hitch is a automatic Pullrite for shortbed trucks
To help me backup to the 5er hitch:
1) I put alignment marks on the hitch to center it
2) I put a white mark on the center of the hitch that is visible from the truck
3) Put a white mark on the center of the pin box
4) on the back window of the truck I put two red marks 1/2 inch apart dead center
5) align all white marks inside the red marks; your good to go


Right on! the only thing would add:
When backing up and the 5th. wheel hitch is about 5 inches from sliding up onto the bed hitch stop, get out and from a side view, make sure the 5th wheel trailer hitch is approx. 3 inches LOWER than the bed hitch/plate, just low enough so the trailer hitch has to slide up onto the truck hitch by pushing the truck hitch down. Just keep backing up real slow until you hear the "clunk" sound. Stop and check that the hitch lock mechanism is secure. Then put a block in front of the rear trailer tire. Make sure the front jacks are extended down about an inch from the ground. Now do the "bump" test buy driving very slowly about 4 inches in order to make sure your truck and 5th. wheel hitch is secure/locked:)


Lower, yes
3" Lower, that's a bit much.

You just need enough to ensure the pin box pushes down a bit, so you don't accidentally high hitch (ie: the pin sits on top of the jaws). You don't really want to try to lift the legs off the ground by backing into it.

I shoot for around 1" low. The truck springs absorb that while the legs stay on the ground.


While 3" may be a bit low as long as you hit the ramp on the hitch head no harm no foul! I would rather hit a tax low than a tad high.
No issue lifting the 5er a couple inches!


I have to disagree. The lower you go, the steeper the angle of the hitch head and the more it's pushing back rather than up. That can generate a lot of force before the pin slides into position. Enough force that if the wheels aren't well blocked, the trailer may roll back then fall off the hitch.

Sure, you can say you block the wheels real well...until the one time they aren't. An inch low is pretty easy and if you don't feel the truck sag a little, it's a good clue to visually verify that the pin is properly seated (which is a good idea regardless).


Disagree all you want, Close is close enough. If your wheels are not chocked well enough to take a 3" low lift they are just mot chocked.

This whole thread is crazy, hooking up id not that hard, close counts, that is part of the beauty of a 5er. I have a split rear window, use the joint in the rear-view mirror to line up the pin.
I can't believe that we can make a simple task so hard.
Russ & Paula the Beagle Belle.
2016 Ram Laramie 3500 Aisin DRW 4X4 Long bed.
2005 Copper Canyon 293 FWSLS, 32' GVWR 12,360#

"Visit and Enjoy Oregon State Parks"

RCMAN46
Explorer
Explorer
silvercorvette wrote:
I have a 95 gallon aux tank that blocks my view of the jaws, I stick a broom stick if=n the jaws and wind up getting in and out of the truck 5 or 10 times to check my alignment and adjust the height of the landing gear.


Try the gun sight method I described. I only get out once to confirm pin height is correct just as soon as pin goes over my 5th wheel tailgate.

silvercorvette
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 95 gallon aux tank that blocks my view of the jaws, I stick a broom stick if=n the jaws and wind up getting in and out of the truck 5 or 10 times to check my alignment and adjust the height of the landing gear.
2014 4 WD Silverado 403 CI diesel long bed dually, B&W hitch with 95 Gallon Auxiliary Fuel Tank, pulling a 33 foot Holiday Rambler Alumascape suite, Winegard SK-3005 TRAV'LER slimline dish, Splendide 2100 XC washer dryer, TST Tire Pressure monitor system.

MarkTwain
Explorer
Explorer
korbe wrote:
Sounds good. I put a mark on my utility box so when I use my rear view mirror, line up the mark and head straight for the pin.


I put a dot at the bottom of the rear window and a white 1 in. paint strip on the front,center of the hitch.
I also made a "marker stick" to level the 5th. so that I can just back up and hook up on the first try.
1.pull the truck and 5th wheel on a level surface. Hook up your trailer.
2. now measure from the underside of the trailer surface right behind the truck.
3. add 1 in. to that measurement. cut a 1x2 stick.
4. The next time you go to hook your 5th. wheel, raise or lower your new stick so the trailer surface is just barely touching. Now back up your 5th. wheel with your marks and the 5th. wheel should be the right height to back and hook up.

krinkle
Explorer
Explorer
Use retractable magnetic rods with tennis balls on the ends. Put one on hitch one on 5ver works for me. With roll up cover so I can see over. Available at cw or dealers. Works for TT hook up as well.

krinkle
Explorer
Explorer
Use retractable magnetic rods with tennis balls on the ends. Put one on hitch one on 5ver works for me. With roll up cover so I can see over. Available at cw or dealers. Works for TT hook up as well.

3ares
Explorer
Explorer
Posted: 03/28/15 10:32pm Link | Quote | Print | Notify Moderator
Do the marks help when you have to hitch at an angle?

Dave & Gean

Yes, if your in angle limits of the hitch.
2016 F250 Super Duty 4x2 Crew Cab XLT
6.7 Power Stroke
6 Speed Transmission
3.31 Electronic Locking Axle
Pullrite 16K Super Glide Hitch
2012 Sundance 275 RE XLT Fithwheel

lazydays
Explorer
Explorer
Or do what I do. Keep backing up and going forward untill your on target, only to find out your either too low or too high. Get out and adjust, get back in and try it again. Repeat if necessary. Not the prettiest but it gets the job done.
Very Patient Wife
Two Boys & a Girl
2013 Keystone Avalanche 345TG
2016 Chevrolet Silverado 3500HD 6.6L

bobx2
Explorer
Explorer
Just use the side mirrors and line up with the trailer that way. No reason to try and look back over your shoulder and strain to try to see the hitch. You know what the trailer looks like when you are pulling it down the road, so you know how it should look when you are backing into it.
Becky, Bob, Taylie and Bode
2009 Silverado Duramax/Allison
2014 Heartland Sundance XLT 245RL
2015 Polaris Sportsman 570 Touring - Mine
2015 Polaris Sportsman 570 Touring - Wifes

RCMAN46
Explorer
Explorer
I use three marks to line up my 5th wheel.

Start with 5th wheel hitched pull forward in a straight line and stop.

Now put a mark dead center on the front of pin box that can be seen with the windshield rear view mirror.

Next a mark in the truck rear window dead center and at same height as the pin box mark.

Last a mark on the rear view mirror when the pin box, rear window and mirror marks are all lined up. This may require moving the marks on the pin box or rear window up or down to get them at the same height.

Now when backing just like aiming a gun when all three marks are lined up the kingpin should be dead center in the hitch.

It has worked every time for me. Even when I have had to approach the trailer at an angle I am close enough the pin will still go into the hitch pocket.

Coach-man
Explorer
Explorer
Since I can see the pin, I painted two white stripes on either side of the latch on my capture plate. As I back up I align the pin between the white stripes, easialy done from ten feet away. I have found that if the hitch height is just above the capture plate with the hitch tilted back, the trailer slides easily up the capture plate, while the truck is squating from the increase in weight. I end up with the fith wheel hitched and level, and the reassuring clunk as the release bar slides into the locked position tells me I am "hitched"!

Veebyes
Explorer II
Explorer II
Nothing here. With the crew cab, a fuel/storage box in the bed & often stuff stored inside the truck the 5th wheel is either unseen or poorly seen using the mirror.

I guess I am doing it the way the big trucks do which cannot see the 5th wheel at all. Use marks on the side for proper alignment & height only needing driver side mirror. Side to side is easy seeing just a little of the trailer side. Height is judged by distance from bedrail to overhang bottom.

When in doubt GOAL.
Boat: 32' 1996 Albin 32+2, single Cummins 315hp
40+ night per year overnighter

2007 Alpenlite 34RLR
2006 Chevy 3500 LT, CC,LB 6.6L Diesel

Ham Radio: VP9KL, IRLP node 7995

valhalla360
Nomad III
Nomad III
rhagfo wrote:
valhalla360 wrote:
djgarcia wrote:
3ares wrote:
My hitch is a automatic Pullrite for shortbed trucks
To help me backup to the 5er hitch:
1) I put alignment marks on the hitch to center it
2) I put a white mark on the center of the hitch that is visible from the truck
3) Put a white mark on the center of the pin box
4) on the back window of the truck I put two red marks 1/2 inch apart dead center
5) align all white marks inside the red marks; your good to go


Right on! the only thing would add:
When backing up and the 5th. wheel hitch is about 5 inches from sliding up onto the bed hitch stop, get out and from a side view, make sure the 5th wheel trailer hitch is approx. 3 inches LOWER than the bed hitch/plate, just low enough so the trailer hitch has to slide up onto the truck hitch by pushing the truck hitch down. Just keep backing up real slow until you hear the "clunk" sound. Stop and check that the hitch lock mechanism is secure. Then put a block in front of the rear trailer tire. Make sure the front jacks are extended down about an inch from the ground. Now do the "bump" test buy driving very slowly about 4 inches in order to make sure your truck and 5th. wheel hitch is secure/locked:)


Lower, yes
3" Lower, that's a bit much.

You just need enough to ensure the pin box pushes down a bit, so you don't accidentally high hitch (ie: the pin sits on top of the jaws). You don't really want to try to lift the legs off the ground by backing into it.

I shoot for around 1" low. The truck springs absorb that while the legs stay on the ground.


While 3" may be a bit low as long as you hit the ramp on the hitch head no harm no foul! I would rather hit a tax low than a tad high.
No issue lifting the 5er a couple inches!


I have to disagree. The lower you go, the steeper the angle of the hitch head and the more it's pushing back rather than up. That can generate a lot of force before the pin slides into position. Enough force that if the wheels aren't well blocked, the trailer may roll back then fall off the hitch.

Sure, you can say you block the wheels real well...until the one time they aren't. An inch low is pretty easy and if you don't feel the truck sag a little, it's a good clue to visually verify that the pin is properly seated (which is a good idea regardless).
Tammy & Mike
Ford F250 V10
2021 Gray Wolf
Gemini Catamaran 34'
Full Time spliting time between boat and RV

rhagfo
Explorer III
Explorer III
valhalla360 wrote:
djgarcia wrote:
3ares wrote:
My hitch is a automatic Pullrite for shortbed trucks
To help me backup to the 5er hitch:
1) I put alignment marks on the hitch to center it
2) I put a white mark on the center of the hitch that is visible from the truck
3) Put a white mark on the center of the pin box
4) on the back window of the truck I put two red marks 1/2 inch apart dead center
5) align all white marks inside the red marks; your good to go


Right on! the only thing would add:
When backing up and the 5th. wheel hitch is about 5 inches from sliding up onto the bed hitch stop, get out and from a side view, make sure the 5th wheel trailer hitch is approx. 3 inches LOWER than the bed hitch/plate, just low enough so the trailer hitch has to slide up onto the truck hitch by pushing the truck hitch down. Just keep backing up real slow until you hear the "clunk" sound. Stop and check that the hitch lock mechanism is secure. Then put a block in front of the rear trailer tire. Make sure the front jacks are extended down about an inch from the ground. Now do the "bump" test buy driving very slowly about 4 inches in order to make sure your truck and 5th. wheel hitch is secure/locked:)


Lower, yes
3" Lower, that's a bit much.

You just need enough to ensure the pin box pushes down a bit, so you don't accidentally high hitch (ie: the pin sits on top of the jaws). You don't really want to try to lift the legs off the ground by backing into it.

I shoot for around 1" low. The truck springs absorb that while the legs stay on the ground.


While 3" may be a bit low as long as you hit the ramp on the hitch head no harm no foul! I would rather hit a tax low than a tad high.
No issue lifting the 5er a couple inches!
Russ & Paula the Beagle Belle.
2016 Ram Laramie 3500 Aisin DRW 4X4 Long bed.
2005 Copper Canyon 293 FWSLS, 32' GVWR 12,360#

"Visit and Enjoy Oregon State Parks"