Jan-10-2019 06:19 AM
Jan-14-2019 03:05 PM
aksnowman wrote:
My brother started full timing this year and yesterday while disconnecting the Toad he noticed there was something wrong with the RV side of the tow receptacle. When he got underneath the back of the RV he found the tow hitch was bolted to the frame but that the frame had cracked where the two bolts are installed. The crack is about 4" long and if not discovered likely would have resulted in the separation of the Toad from the RV. I am to sure of the Model but the RV is a Thor product, 38' long and only a couple of years old.
Jan-14-2019 02:59 PM
Jan-14-2019 01:04 PM
hohenwald48 wrote:
Well, I'm not sure the OP was actually looking for a lot of speculative guessing as to the cause of the problem. Seems to me the original point was to warn folks to be aware of the possibilities and inspect your rig on a regular basis.
There are probably dozens if not hundreds of things that could have caused or contributed to the crack. Things break. The point is that we should all crawl under our rigs and look for things that "ain't" right from time to time.
Jan-14-2019 10:49 AM
Gjac wrote:
Timmac, that is a nice mod did you do that work yourself or did a shop do it for you? That box beam structure looks like it will take more than 7500 lbs but maybe you might be limited by something else like your transmission.
Jan-14-2019 08:40 AM
frankdamp wrote:
How come whatever spell-checker (if there is one) in the forum doesn't spot that "tounge" isn't a real word. It's "TONGUE".
Jan-14-2019 06:46 AM
Jan-14-2019 04:27 AM
Jan-13-2019 07:09 PM
2021 Nexus Viper 27V. Class B+
2019 Ford Ranger 4x4
Jan-13-2019 06:21 PM
Jan-13-2019 12:47 PM
Jan-13-2019 11:08 AM
Jan-13-2019 08:50 AM
sundancer268 wrote:This was also my observation. What you can't see in the photo is the inside of the crack or the grain structure of the crack itself. If you see a very fine grain structure along the crack that would indicate work hardening along the crack caused by fatigue of the lower flange, especially if you see some rust at the rear of that crack. If the grain structure is large that would indicate more of a catastrophic failure that happened all at once. I would expect a fatigue crack. In order of strength a boxed beam extension is best, then I beam, then C channel. I just checked mine and found that the extension was a C channel but had a 2 ft section of box beam welded on to the C channel were the hitch is attached. The hitch is bolted vertically to the side of the box beam/C channel with 3 1/2 in dia. bolts. Bolts in shear work better than in tension. Mine is 23 years old so thanks for posting this. For a fix for your brothers hitch I would re weld the crack and weld on a end plate to prevent the lower flange from flexing or weld in a box beam to the inside of the C channel. Let us know how he makes out.
Looks like an old crack with what I think I see is rust where the metal cracked. This probably has been growing for a while if it was a fresh break there would be a bright shine to the broken pieces.
Jan-12-2019 06:23 PM
Jan-12-2019 05:56 PM