How to avoid getting blown all over the road
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May-04-2021 11:07 AM
Curious on how I can avoid wind blowing the camper and my truck all over the place to the point of it being really annoying to drive and causing me to not even want to use it.
I have RAM 1500 with the 5.7 V8. It doesn't work too hard to pull my 29' toy hauler (7k lbs empty and ~8.5k with stuff loaded) at 65mph down the road. The problem comes in that even with slight side wind gusts I'm blown all over the place and I have to slow down to about 50mph to keep it drivable.
I have a BlueOx hitch with sway controls as well as the trailer friction sway control.
I have LT tires and after getting the weight distribution down pat, I have also installed airbags in the springs to keep the truck level. This helped, but I am still getting blown around the road.
I'm to the point of looking at a larger 2500 diesel RAM, or a full on drivable RV toyhauler, or just an RV that I would put a standard trail behind.
Before I go to these (expensive) extremes. Does anyone on here have any advice on something I could be missing?
Thank you,
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May-14-2021 05:12 AM
BackOfThePack wrote:
Only 1 line I can disagree with
— TW can be accurately determined.
The most accurate TW that can be determined is what you get when you compare weights of steer+drive in pass 1 and 3.
If you need a WDH, the nose of the trailer will be low when the bars are loose. And as the tongue goes down weight is transferred from axle to tongue.
But that does not matter, because the percentage TW that matters is what you get when ready to drive.
Pass number 2 gives you more numbers, sure. But very many people have issues working with numbers, let alone deciding what numbers they need to solve the problem
1). Across scale with bars torqued.
2). Across scale with bars slack.
3). Drop trailer and weigh TV solo.
Now maybe somebody reading this might think I must be wrong because so many want pass 2. The only reason I can see to want those numbers is they do not believe the weight distribution tongue/axles change as the tongue is lowered. If you believe moving something/anything from behind to in front of the axle changes the TW, a simple diagram can prove it.
Lets start with a side view of single axle trailer. With the trailer set at any given slope, front/rear, draw a vertical line thru center of axle, mark that line on side of trailer. Now lower the tongue. When you draw the vertical line there is a space between the lines. If you can see the lines as planes, there will be a wedge-shaped area that moved from behind to in front of axle. Now how much weight is in that wedge? I'm not smart enough to figure, but I know it is not 0.
Now for a multi-axle trailer, the picture is more complicated, but there will be multiple lines, but there will be a wedge that moves in front of front axle, and another wedge that moves in front of last axle.
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May-13-2021 04:33 PM
MyersAvionics wrote:
The dealer hooked up our hitch when we purchased the camper. They very well may have not done it correctly. I never redid their install. I will be taking my time when I receive the ProPride next week when I install it to ensure it is done correctly.
I bought the hitch type in 2007. All other types are obsolete. Given that an effective towing combination is one-third each TV-Hitch-TT, it’s a dirt cheap hitch.
You’ve moved to an an effective steering component versus the other types which — while they might distribute tongue weight to formula — can resist but not eliminate mis-alignment between TV & TT.
Trailer MUST be dead-level after hitch roughed in at home. Use a level in doorway FF-RR. Bubble mainly in center. TV might be slightly tail down which is normal. This may take time AND may involve using a shop. “Slightly nose down” IS NOT acceptable. Trailer braking is DEPENDENT on having both axles equally loaded per attitude PRIOR to braking onset.
Still need to do The Three Pass Scale Method. Get the CAT SCALE app.
First step is corrected solo tire pressure. (I run the same tire pressure solo or loaded as it’s the right number per door sticker and L&P Chart). Checked morning dead cold after overnight; recorded. After topping fuel tank on the truck where ONLY permanent gear + driver is aboard the baseline number is acquired. This reading also gives the lightest weight of the truck.
The TT needs to have full fresh water + propane. Tires to sidewall max for test. Gear aboard TT & TV should represent a camping trip. Top off fuel tank first. All passengers aboard each step. All three must be done together.
1). Across scale with bars torqued.
2). Across scale with bars slack.
3). Drop trailer and weigh TV solo.
— Steer Axle should be the same in #1 & #3.
— TW can be accurately determined.
Another reading can be done which ought to be “mandatory” on a toy hauler: sliding axle. Talk with weigh-master at Fuel Desk. This is where the trailer axles are split onto two scale pads. One creeps forward until STOP is heard across Intercom. This procedure gives you the INDIVIDUAL axle weights.
Toy Haulers are compromised designs. Do what you can to get axle loadings close, AND TW inside 10-15% (higher better but harder to adjust WDH). 13% GTG.
Test: at 30-mph in a hard stop the combined rig WILL stop faster than the TV solo (camping loads; same day). If it doesn’t, start with brake controller settings. Trailer must lead TV.
The wind load (crosswind) against a tall unbalanced trailer is significant. Squared edges means winds can’t escape (aero they do; Airstream). Second is unnaturally talk ride height to accommodate slides, etc. Wind getting UNDER trailer sideways is adding PULL to PUSH.
The trailer WILL start to get airborne behind the axles. All the forces increase on the square as one moves farther rear. This is how 18-wheelers get knocked over. In high wind areas drivers will pull the tandem axle set on a van to the rear (despite weight imbalance and laws) to help resist crosswinds. Loaded weight helps (30-44k in the box), but realistically one must slow to 45-mph to maintain headway and keep wind pressure minimized.
The Game is actually at the TV. The Drive Axle. IDEAL tire pressure is crucial. Too high means it will lose traction sooner, and too low means lousy braking & steering plus high heat (premature failure). Dead-on and the tire lives long and provides best traction in all conditions.
I run my pickup at the RR GAWR once hitched. Before being hitched it’s within 40-lbs at all four corners. The most weight on the Drive Axle to keep the highest load in the tread patch. Together, the combined tire patch on that axle is small.
The trailer suspension is what’s left. Leaf sprung is pretty much junk in resisting side forces. Narrow track (where axles attach, NOT tire distance), incredibly short wheel travel (okay on an open construction trailer, NOT on a tall tippy RV). DEXTER Tor-Flex is a needed upgrade (or MOR-Ryde offerings; axle replacement).
Trailer anti-lock disc brakes crowd a PPP hitch hard for which is more important.
1990 35’ Silver Streak
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May-12-2021 02:22 PM
2oldman wrote:
One nice thing about a Freightliner M2-106 MDT. Hardly notice wind at all.
Well, my 106 inch cab Freightliner, with 20,000 steer, 22,000 lift axle and a pair of 23,000 drive axles could tell the driver when wind was pushing the side of the 17 ft long, 6.5 foot deep empty open topped bed. Add 30 tons of gravel in the bed, wind was less of a issue.
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May-12-2021 02:04 PM
2oldman wrote:
One nice thing about a Freightliner M2-106 MDT. Hardly notice wind at all.
Always at least one in the crowd....
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold
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May-12-2021 01:26 PM
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May-12-2021 01:24 PM
JRscooby wrote:MyersAvionics wrote:time2roll wrote:time2roll wrote:I am still curious on the weight distribution effect on the front suspension.
Does the front suspension rise or compress when you get all hooked up?
It looked pretty level even without the bags. I did notice the front end steering was a bit lighter without the bags though.
I watched a friend hook up, as we where discussing his handling issue. The front of TV came up when the tongue was lowered. Latched coupler, jacked back up to hook the bars. When lifted jack off ground, the front was still higher than before hooked up. When he aired up the bags, the TV was level. Made a bet the scale would tell him front was still light. Never measured, but bet both ends of TV where riding higher with trailer than without. When readjusted the bars, handling improved
The dealer hooked up our hitch when we purchased the camper. They very well may have not done it correctly. I never redid their install. I will be taking my time when I receive the ProPride next week when I install it to ensure it is done correctly.
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May-12-2021 01:19 PM
MyersAvionics wrote:time2roll wrote:time2roll wrote:I am still curious on the weight distribution effect on the front suspension.
Does the front suspension rise or compress when you get all hooked up?
It looked pretty level even without the bags. I did notice the front end steering was a bit lighter without the bags though.
I watched a friend hook up, as we where discussing his handling issue. The front of TV came up when the tongue was lowered. Latched coupler, jacked back up to hook the bars. When lifted jack off ground, the front was still higher than before hooked up. When he aired up the bags, the TV was level. Made a bet the scale would tell him front was still light. Never measured, but bet both ends of TV where riding higher with trailer than without. When readjusted the bars, handling improved
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May-12-2021 12:00 PM
time2roll wrote:time2roll wrote:I am still curious on the weight distribution effect on the front suspension.
Does the front suspension rise or compress when you get all hooked up?
It looked pretty level even without the bags. I did notice the front end steering was a bit lighter without the bags though.
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May-12-2021 11:57 AM
time2roll wrote:I am still curious on the weight distribution effect on the front suspension.
Does the front suspension rise or compress when you get all hooked up?
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May-11-2021 07:53 AM
BarneyS wrote:
Personally, I would set the WD to the heaviest tongue weight (no toys in your case) and call it good unless the handling of the vehicle deteriorated too much with the toys loaded. Of course, each person uses their rig differently and if you always tow with the toys loaded then you should probably set the WD for the loaded condition.:)
Barney
We only use it when hauling bikes quite honestly. I may weigh it loaded and unloaded just out of curiosity sake.
I also just puked a bit and bought the ProPride hitch. Thought about the Equilizer, but figured if you're doing it, you might as well go all the way and be happy you did when you've got a 15hr trip ahead!
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May-11-2021 07:50 AM
I would not try to compromise and set it for somewhere in the middle. Doing that will give you a "never right" situation which, in my opinion, is not good.
Barney
Hensley "Arrow" 1400# hitch (Sold)
Not towing now.
Former tow vehicles were 2016 Ram 2500 CTD, 2002 Ford F250, 7.3 PSD, 1997 Ram 2500 5.9 gas engine
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May-11-2021 07:17 AM
BarneyS wrote:
Keep in mind that toy hauler trailers usually have the heaviest tongue weights when they are EMPTY of the toys. Adding them makes the tongue weight lighter because the toys are normally loaded behind the trailers axles.
Barney
Duly noted and understood. The axles are set fairly far back for this reason as well. I still plan to weigh everything to get proper weight distribution.
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May-11-2021 07:12 AM
This gives them the heaviest tongue weights when they are not carrying toys back there.
Barney
Hensley "Arrow" 1400# hitch (Sold)
Not towing now.
Former tow vehicles were 2016 Ram 2500 CTD, 2002 Ford F250, 7.3 PSD, 1997 Ram 2500 5.9 gas engine
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May-11-2021 05:38 AM
mr_andyj wrote:
You did not say which Ram you have. Is it one of those dinky short wheelbase trucks with single cab and 5 foot bed, or is it a crew cab with an 8 foot bed?
Wheelbase makes a difference.
A long wheel base will make towing easier than with a short wheelbase.
I have doubt about what changing tires will do to combat wind.
If the wind blows against the side of your huge, yet fairly light-for-the-size trailer, then it is going to move.
The guy mentioned AirTabs, and that, or doing something to smooth out the airflow behind the trailer might be the biggest thing you can do to help. Think of those door flap things the big rigs have on some of their 53 foot trailers. That helps with mpg's but also with control as it smooths out the air flowing off the rear.
On my trailers I put all the roof junk at the front and nothing on the roof on the rear half as I want the air the have time to smooth out before dropping off the back. Every little bit helps.
I have the quad cab with the 6'4" bed. Looking at all the options, the wife and I are going to spring for the ProPride 3P hitch. It's a good investment in the long run. It retains its value well and if I do go to a 2500 we'll transfer its use over to that.
I just need to determine the loaded tongue weight to determine which version to purchase. I'm thinking the 1000 or 1400. The toyhauler is just shy of 7k lbs dry. Add water, bikes, and materials and I'm easily 8k lbs.