โJul-21-2017 10:30 AM
โNov-23-2018 06:36 AM
โNov-23-2018 05:17 AM
Slipp wrote:
The bottom line is this trailer is ment to haul toys, and we do not haul a toy.
โNov-23-2018 04:16 AM
โAug-10-2017 07:52 AM
mkirsch wrote:pickup is within a half inch front to rear as when unloaded
I *think* you mean that the heights are within 1/2" of UNLOADED height, not within 1/2" of each other, but just in case you meant 1/2" of each other, you need to know that that is no longer the way to adjust a WD hitch.
Modern WD hitch adjustment deals exclusively with the front ride height only. Depending on the age of your truck you would bring the front end back down to unloaded ride height by adjusting the WD hitch (older) or between halfway and all the way back down (within the last 5 years). Rear ride height is irrelevant.
โAug-10-2017 07:20 AM
pickup is within a half inch front to rear as when unloaded
โAug-09-2017 11:47 AM
Durb wrote:Towin Toys wrote:
The 1500# WD Hitch wasn't quite enough. The good folks at Major Hitch in Boise upgraded me to the 2,000# bars & the 2,000# 2-1/2" shank for only $45.00. I then thought my factory receiver might be a weak link so I put a Curt V5 commercial receiver on it with a 2,700# tongue & 20,000# tow rating. Filled the fresh water tank and loaded the RzR. Ended up raising the ball one hole. Trailer measures 22" front & rear from the bottom of the frame to the road on a level surfaced hooked up & pickup is within a half inch front to rear as when unloaded. I'm happy now. We'll see how it does this weekend......
I hope you are going someplace benign on your first trip to make sure your trailer and hitch are dialed in properly. I wouldn't go on 55 North along the Payette unless my confidence level is 100%. That road, although beautiful, kind of creeps me out even in a car. Good luck and have fun.
โAug-08-2017 10:32 PM
Towin Toys wrote:
The 1500# WD Hitch wasn't quite enough. The good folks at Major Hitch in Boise upgraded me to the 2,000# bars & the 2,000# 2-1/2" shank for only $45.00. I then thought my factory receiver might be a weak link so I put a Curt V5 commercial receiver on it with a 2,700# tongue & 20,000# tow rating. Filled the fresh water tank and loaded the RzR. Ended up raising the ball one hole. Trailer measures 22" front & rear from the bottom of the frame to the road on a level surfaced hooked up & pickup is within a half inch front to rear as when unloaded. I'm happy now. We'll see how it does this weekend......
โAug-08-2017 06:15 PM
โJul-21-2017 06:42 PM
โJul-21-2017 06:15 PM
โJul-21-2017 02:57 PM
bikendan wrote:sgip2000 wrote:Towintoys wrote:
So we are picking up a new Desert Fox 24 AS tow hauler tomorrow and the stated dry hitch weight is 1610 pounds. The dealership says they usually just use a 1,000 pound rated weight distributing hitch for those. I'm Leary. I have a 1,000/10,000 LB Equil-i-zer hitch currently bit I also had Camping World set aside a new 1,400/14,000 LB hitch for me. I'm wondering if the 14,000 pound hitch will be OK. With the added weigh of toys in the back behind the axles there should be less tongue weight than a dry tongue weight.....right? Also, do the air bags our Silverado 2500HD has play a factor in this?
Thoughts? 1,400/14,000 is the largest one Equil-i-zer makes.
For the Equalizer system, all you'd need is the heaver bars to "upgrade" to 1,400/14,000 lb. Everything else should be the same. No need to buy another whole system.
I'm pretty sure that the 4pt Equal-i-zer requires you to upgrade the hitch head also, when moving to the heavier bars.
โJul-21-2017 11:59 AM
โJul-21-2017 11:18 AM
sgip2000 wrote:Towintoys wrote:
So we are picking up a new Desert Fox 24 AS tow hauler tomorrow and the stated dry hitch weight is 1610 pounds. The dealership says they usually just use a 1,000 pound rated weight distributing hitch for those. I'm Leary. I have a 1,000/10,000 LB Equil-i-zer hitch currently bit I also had Camping World set aside a new 1,400/14,000 LB hitch for me. I'm wondering if the 14,000 pound hitch will be OK. With the added weigh of toys in the back behind the axles there should be less tongue weight than a dry tongue weight.....right? Also, do the air bags our Silverado 2500HD has play a factor in this?
Thoughts? 1,400/14,000 is the largest one Equil-i-zer makes.
For the Equalizer system, all you'd need is the heaver bars to "upgrade" to 1,400/14,000 lb. Everything else should be the same. No need to buy another whole system.
โJul-21-2017 10:40 AM
Towintoys wrote:
So we are picking up a new Desert Fox 24 AS tow hauler tomorrow and the stated dry hitch weight is 1610 pounds. The dealership says they usually just use a 1,000 pound rated weight distributing hitch for those. I'm Leary. I have a 1,000/10,000 LB Equil-i-zer hitch currently bit I also had Camping World set aside a new 1,400/14,000 LB hitch for me. I'm wondering if the 14,000 pound hitch will be OK. With the added weigh of toys in the back behind the axles there should be less tongue weight than a dry tongue weight.....right? Also, do the air bags our Silverado 2500HD has play a factor in this?
Thoughts? 1,400/14,000 is the largest one Equil-i-zer makes.
โJul-21-2017 10:36 AM