โJan-13-2012 05:35 PM
โMar-22-2012 05:28 AM
JBarca wrote:Ron3rd wrote:rexlion wrote:bobbyg123 wrote:
This sounds like a fantastic product. The W/D concept makes sense to me, but I'm still not clear about how the anti-sway works. If this product works as advertised, I'm going to give it a shot.
How the anti-sway works: take one hand and grip your other wrist. Try to turn your wrist. Now slide your hand a little ways up your arm, but keep the hand's diameter the same, and try again to turn your arm. It's harder.
That's how the Andersen works. The hitch ball and shaft are a solid piece of metal. The shaft has a bit of a taper to it, so it gets larger toward the ball end. It fits into a socket lined with grippy brake material. As the weight of the tongue pushes down on the ball, it wedges that tapered shaft down into the brake material in the socket, which makes the shaft hard to turn. The chains force the shaft to turn right along with the trailer; the trailer does not pivot on the ball, rather the trailer, ball and shaft move as one.
I'm not following you; what do you mean by "shaft"? It looks like the tongue sits on a conventional ball and there are 2 chains that have plastic springs at the end. Sorry, but I'm trying to understand this new hitch.
See this link to the pics of the shank (aka shaft)on the tow ball and the friction material lining. The tow ball shank is machined on a taper that wedges down into the tapered brake material liner held by the tapered socket of the hitch shank in the truck receiver. The weight of the trailer tongue applies a force down on the tow ball shank wedging it into the brake pad material.
http://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/25717515/gotomsg/25720162.cfm#25720162
The tow ball shank is pinned to the bottom chain plate which is held from rotating by the chains and urethane springs. The chain plate can only move a small amount by the spring compression at the ends of the chain however the truck as it turns moves the hitch shank a lot if needed. The hitch shank slips around the tow ball shank. Since the to ball shank/shaft are held by the chains and springs there is still a lot of resistance from the brake material between the truck and the camper. Sway forces agasint the side of the TT are resisted from making the TV and TT connection pivot at the tow ball by the amount of grip (friction) from the tow ball shank in the brake pad material.
Does this help?
โMar-21-2012 07:36 PM
โMar-21-2012 06:36 PM
โMar-21-2012 05:51 PM
Ron3rd wrote:rexlion wrote:bobbyg123 wrote:
This sounds like a fantastic product. The W/D concept makes sense to me, but I'm still not clear about how the anti-sway works. If this product works as advertised, I'm going to give it a shot.
How the anti-sway works: take one hand and grip your other wrist. Try to turn your wrist. Now slide your hand a little ways up your arm, but keep the hand's diameter the same, and try again to turn your arm. It's harder.
That's how the Andersen works. The hitch ball and shaft are a solid piece of metal. The shaft has a bit of a taper to it, so it gets larger toward the ball end. It fits into a socket lined with grippy brake material. As the weight of the tongue pushes down on the ball, it wedges that tapered shaft down into the brake material in the socket, which makes the shaft hard to turn. The chains force the shaft to turn right along with the trailer; the trailer does not pivot on the ball, rather the trailer, ball and shaft move as one.
I'm not following you; what do you mean by "shaft"? It looks like the tongue sits on a conventional ball and there are 2 chains that have plastic springs at the end. Sorry, but I'm trying to understand this new hitch.
โMar-21-2012 03:49 PM
โMar-21-2012 03:26 PM
rexlion wrote:bobbyg123 wrote:
This sounds like a fantastic product. The W/D concept makes sense to me, but I'm still not clear about how the anti-sway works. If this product works as advertised, I'm going to give it a shot.
How the anti-sway works: take one hand and grip your other wrist. Try to turn your wrist. Now slide your hand a little ways up your arm, but keep the hand's diameter the same, and try again to turn your arm. It's harder.
That's how the Andersen works. The hitch ball and shaft are a solid piece of metal. The shaft has a bit of a taper to it, so it gets larger toward the ball end. It fits into a socket lined with grippy brake material. As the weight of the tongue pushes down on the ball, it wedges that tapered shaft down into the brake material in the socket, which makes the shaft hard to turn. The chains force the shaft to turn right along with the trailer; the trailer does not pivot on the ball, rather the trailer, ball and shaft move as one.
โMar-21-2012 09:26 AM
bobbyg123 wrote:
This sounds like a fantastic product. The W/D concept makes sense to me, but I'm still not clear about how the anti-sway works. If this product works as advertised, I'm going to give it a shot.
โMar-20-2012 09:17 PM
โMar-20-2012 03:34 PM
โMar-18-2012 10:12 PM
โMar-18-2012 10:26 AM
Bruce H. wrote:That would depend on several factors, but we can make a wild guess.
-- In one of the YouTube videos on the hitch, it is stated that 1/4" spring compression puts 2000 pounds of tension on each chain. I would like to know how many pounds of tension 1/8" compression creates.
โMar-18-2012 09:43 AM
โMar-18-2012 09:07 AM
โMar-17-2012 07:38 PM
โMar-17-2012 04:19 PM
zues wrote:
My coupler will not open with tension on the chains