โJun-10-2013 10:13 PM
โJun-11-2013 10:28 AM
Alley Fox wrote:
Jim-Linda- I have a 32" Visio LCD TV. Does that mean I am good to go?? ๐
Just kidding, of course.......
โJun-11-2013 10:08 AM
Water-Bug wrote:REWahoo wrote:motorcycle jack wrote:
The placement of the items inside has very little to do with the pin weight. It is where the balance point versus the axle placement that effects it most. If you have a problem with understanding that, let me give you an example. Lets say the given 5th wheel has a total weight of 10K and the pin weight is 2K (20% of total weight). Now add 1K to the rear of the unit. Does that mean the pin weight is now 1K? Since you added it behind the axle (which is not the balance point). No. The total weight is 11K (10 + 1) and the pin weight is now 20% x 11K or 2200 lbs. Sorry, just the nature of the design.
An engineer will be along shortly to point out the inaccuracies in the above post. ๐
He rides a bike. Cut him a little slack. ๐
โJun-11-2013 09:50 AM
โJun-11-2013 09:47 AM
Water-Bug wrote:REWahoo wrote:motorcycle jack wrote:
The placement of the items inside has very little to do with the pin weight. It is where the balance point versus the axle placement that effects it most. If you have a problem with understanding that, let me give you an example. Lets say the given 5th wheel has a total weight of 10K and the pin weight is 2K (20% of total weight). Now add 1K to the rear of the unit. Does that mean the pin weight is now 1K? Since you added it behind the axle (which is not the balance point). No. The total weight is 11K (10 + 1) and the pin weight is now 20% x 11K or 2200 lbs. Sorry, just the nature of the design.
An engineer will be along shortly to point out the inaccuracies in the above post. ๐
He rides a bike. Cut him a little slack. ๐
โJun-11-2013 09:14 AM
DSteiner51 wrote:jaycocamprs wrote:Lantley wrote:
Wow are we confused. Why does a locomotive pull the train and not push it? The weight holds the train on the tracks.
The locomotive pulls the train because the cars are not strong enough in compression. They would crush the rear cars.
Trains have absolutely nothing to do with pulling 5th wheels. The locomotive carries no weight from anything it pulls and is planted on rails.
โJun-11-2013 09:05 AM
Alley Fox wrote:
OK, maybe a naive question but why don't 5th wheel manufacturers place some of the heavier items in the rear to help relieve the heavy pin weights? I'm thinking about things like gensets, water tanks and propane. Pin weight recommendations usually say 10%-25% of total trailer weight so why not try to help relieve some of that? What's the tradeoff?
โJun-11-2013 08:57 AM
โJun-11-2013 08:41 AM
โJun-11-2013 08:32 AM
jaycocamprs wrote:Lantley wrote:
Wow are we confused. Why does a locomotive pull the train and not push it? The weight holds the train on the tracks.
The locomotive pulls the train because the cars are not strong enough in compression. They would crush the rear cars.
โJun-11-2013 08:28 AM
goducks10 wrote:Jim-Linda wrote:
If one uses a sufficient TV, pin weight doesn't matter.
Jim
Ding Ding Ding and we have a winner:)
โJun-11-2013 07:54 AM
jaycocamprs wrote:Lantley wrote:
Wow are we confused. Why does a locomotive pull the train and not push it? The weight holds the train on the tracks.
The locomotive pulls the train because the cars are not strong enough in compression. They would crush the rear cars.
โJun-11-2013 07:25 AM
โJun-11-2013 07:15 AM
Jim-Linda wrote:
If one uses a sufficient TV, pin weight doesn't matter.
Jim
โJun-11-2013 07:13 AM
โJun-11-2013 07:08 AM
Lantley wrote:
Wow are we confused. Why does a locomotive pull the train and not push it? The weight holds the train on the tracks.