โJul-24-2018 06:19 PM
โAug-02-2018 09:51 AM
shades9323 wrote:Fordlover wrote:
Anecdotal, but for what it's worth, I towed a 21 footer with ~650 lbs of tongue weight on my 600/6000 Equalizer hitch for 11 years, about 15K towing miles. Never an ounce of sway, nor any visible damage to the hitch.
Did it transfer enough weight back to the front axle?
โAug-02-2018 07:31 AM
shades9323 wrote:Fordlover wrote:
Anecdotal, but for what it's worth, I towed a 21 footer with ~650 lbs of tongue weight on my 600/6000 Equalizer hitch for 11 years, about 15K towing miles. Never an ounce of sway, nor any visible damage to the hitch.
Did it transfer enough weight back to the front axle?
โAug-02-2018 02:43 AM
Fordlover wrote:
Anecdotal, but for what it's worth, I towed a 21 footer with ~650 lbs of tongue weight on my 600/6000 Equalizer hitch for 11 years, about 15K towing miles. Never an ounce of sway, nor any visible damage to the hitch.
โAug-01-2018 11:19 AM
โAug-01-2018 07:18 AM
dodge guy wrote:shades9323 wrote:aftermath wrote:
Has anyone suggested that he actually weighs his set up to see what the actual tongue weight is? I towed a 21ft Starcraft hybrid and had two propane tanks and two batteries on the tongue. The folks at Equalizer suggested the 1000 lb bars. This set up worked well for me.
The OP has a posted TW of something like 400pounds. I am guessing that if he loads on the propane and batteries it will be at least double that.
If you are not sure, simply hook up the rig with the hitch they gave you. If you can get it straight and level and return the weight to the front wheels WITHOUT cranking the hitch down to the max, they you should be good to go.
Pretty simply solution, unless I missed something. The design of the trailer itself is another matter. IF the dealer is going to reattach the safety chains so it will all work then do that.
I took it to the dealer last Saturday to have them move the chains. On the way back I decided to stop at the cat scales. I had thrown 110lbs worth of stuff near the door (in front of axles). I doubt we hit cc as we donโt carry water or a generator or anything. Not a ton of storage up front either. Scaled at 540 lbs on the tongue.
Yep, this is what most of us have been saying all along. Sure you could have 800 or 900lbs of TW but it wouldnโt be properly loaded then.
Glad your finally getting the answers you need.
โJul-31-2018 04:40 PM
shades9323 wrote:aftermath wrote:
Has anyone suggested that he actually weighs his set up to see what the actual tongue weight is? I towed a 21ft Starcraft hybrid and had two propane tanks and two batteries on the tongue. The folks at Equalizer suggested the 1000 lb bars. This set up worked well for me.
The OP has a posted TW of something like 400pounds. I am guessing that if he loads on the propane and batteries it will be at least double that.
If you are not sure, simply hook up the rig with the hitch they gave you. If you can get it straight and level and return the weight to the front wheels WITHOUT cranking the hitch down to the max, they you should be good to go.
Pretty simply solution, unless I missed something. The design of the trailer itself is another matter. IF the dealer is going to reattach the safety chains so it will all work then do that.
I took it to the dealer last Saturday to have them move the chains. On the way back I decided to stop at the cat scales. I had thrown 110lbs worth of stuff near the door (in front of axles). I doubt we hit cc as we donโt carry water or a generator or anything. Not a ton of storage up front either. Scaled at 540 lbs on the tongue.
โJul-31-2018 03:40 PM
aftermath wrote:
Has anyone suggested that he actually weighs his set up to see what the actual tongue weight is? I towed a 21ft Starcraft hybrid and had two propane tanks and two batteries on the tongue. The folks at Equalizer suggested the 1000 lb bars. This set up worked well for me.
The OP has a posted TW of something like 400pounds. I am guessing that if he loads on the propane and batteries it will be at least double that.
If you are not sure, simply hook up the rig with the hitch they gave you. If you can get it straight and level and return the weight to the front wheels WITHOUT cranking the hitch down to the max, they you should be good to go.
Pretty simply solution, unless I missed something. The design of the trailer itself is another matter. IF the dealer is going to reattach the safety chains so it will all work then do that.
โJul-31-2018 03:12 PM
โJul-28-2018 09:08 AM
TurnThePage wrote:Umm, like say L*ppert?? But they are such a reputable company. Their website proudly declares: Our teams a committed to supplying premium quality RV components from design to delivery. :R
I believe whoever fabricated the trailer frame blew it.
โJul-28-2018 06:14 AM
ScottG wrote:
I agree with keeping the present bars. They are the right choice for your low tongue weight and using bars that are way over rated have their down side as well.
โJul-27-2018 11:35 AM
Lynnmor wrote:Hmmm... You say that the hitch design is inferior like they're new to the game. My Equal-I-zer has plenty of clearance. I believe whoever fabricated the trailer frame blew it.
I think that the hitch design is poor. To have material protruding out towards the trailer frame is just lack of understanding your product. The OP saw the problem early on, but how many are out there with this thing just waiting to cause a failure?
This is going back and forth about the correct bars, but I hope that the strength of the toungue and frame is being considered before using bars that are extremely heavy.
As far as frame paint goes, a good coat of Rustoleum would be a great improvement by covering that Easter egg dye that the factory uses.
โJul-27-2018 11:00 AM
myredracer wrote:
I wonder if a ball with a 1" rise would help or solve the clearance issue? Also get the trailer slightly nose down when hooked up, if it isn't now will also help. Has the hybrid TT been to a scale to get TW & GVW?
On the bar rating, can the correct amount of wt. get restored onto the steer axle without having to use gorilla-level force on the bars with the 600 lb rating? Looks to me from the Equal-i-zer website that they recommend a 1,000/10,000 WDH for that particular TT. As above, I would contact the manufacturer, esp. since it seems like a 50/50 split in recommendation between 600 & 1,000 lbs.
Does not appear to be a BAL frame in the imgur photos because it doesn't have an under-mount coupler. If there's no BAL sticker on the frame, it's easy to tell by all the huck bolts (rivets). But the Jayco website seems to show a BAL frame in some photos and not in others. I think they've changed frame manufacturers over recent years tho?
We have a Reese DC WDH, different animal but ordered spring bars (600 lb) that were too small before we owned the TT (6800 lb GVWR). Could not get enough wt. onto the steer axle and bars were bent like bananas. The tail of the TT bounced like crazy. Upgraded to 1,000 lb bars and solved the problems. Need to be careful with some TTs and using too heavy a rating of the bars otherwise can cause damage.
โJul-27-2018 10:30 AM
โJul-27-2018 08:14 AM
dodge guy wrote:mkirsch wrote:
You're having way too many issues and this is becoming way too complicated.
Get a different hitch and be done with it.
Seeing the issue now, itโs not the hitch, itโs the trailer!
โJul-27-2018 07:34 AM