โFeb-11-2019 05:36 AM
โFeb-11-2019 06:56 PM
โFeb-11-2019 06:40 PM
camperdave wrote:dodge guy wrote:
The EQ, even though they claim 4 points is really only 2! And those are at the L brackets. The pivot points at the hitch head do very little.
You got it backwards. The friction between the bar socket and the head is where the majority of the work is done. The fact that they sell L bracket plastic pad things pretty much confirms that they are not counting on much friction happening here. Otherwise the'd use brake material instead of plastic lol.
as stated on the Equal-i-zer website:
"Use of the Sway Bracket Jackets does slightly reduce the amount of friction sway control provided by the L-bracket assemblies. However, this reduction is minimal, and in most applications barely noticeable because the majority of the Original Equalizer Hitchโs integrated sway control comes from the rotational friction surfaces of the spring arm sockets in the hitch head. This sway control is not affected at all by the use of the Sway Bracket Jackets. The L-brackets will still provide a certain measure of sway dampening friction."
โFeb-11-2019 02:41 PM
gpeade wrote:
Not sure why the links didn't post. I added them via the hyperlink tab.
Turns out the salesman was showing me two different hitches. One was an original Equal-i-zer and the other was a Fastway E2.
โFeb-11-2019 12:22 PM
dodge guy wrote:
The EQ, even though they claim 4 points is really only 2! And those are at the L brackets. The pivot points at the hitch head do very little.
โFeb-11-2019 12:01 PM
Nosedive wrote:
I've had both. I actually had a couple failures of the Reece cam arms. I do not believe that this was due to the anything wrong with the hitch itself, but rather the relationship of the heights of my truck vs. the camper tongue which required a severe hitch head angle that attributed to the failures. The Reece is a good product. I now run the Equalizer and will say it doesn't provide as much sway control as the Reece Dual Cam did by a fractional amount. What the Equalizer does do it not make you turn your trailer frame into swiss cheese. Initially my dealer set up my Reece hitch completely wrong which required redrilling holes to position the brackets correctly. My trailer now has 6 holes on each side due to this. If the dealer had set up an Equalizer wrong, all it would have meant was loosening bolts and adjusting. I'll take the tradeoff on the slight amount off less sway control.
โFeb-11-2019 10:58 AM
โFeb-11-2019 10:48 AM
โFeb-11-2019 10:45 AM
โFeb-11-2019 10:21 AM
โFeb-11-2019 10:02 AM
โFeb-11-2019 09:59 AM
gpeade wrote:
Equalizer as in brand name, not hitch style.
โFeb-11-2019 09:37 AM
downtheroad wrote:
Maybe I'm confused....but is your dealer talking about an Equal-i-zer brand hitch or an Equalizer hitch (often a generic name for a basic weight distribution hitch)??
โFeb-11-2019 09:28 AM
gpeade wrote:BarneyS wrote:
Your salesman was mistaken.
Barney
Partly yes I believe he was. That's why I came here for unbiased real life experience based opinions.
From what I have researched, what you are referring to in the model 4. He advised the trailer I was looking at would only require a model 2. This model had round bars that clipped into the hitch head from the bottom. Based on what you fine folks have told me, and my own research on that particular model hitch, the bars sliding on the take up brackets is the only sway control. Which to me don't seem like would provide much resistance for a 3ton trailer.
โFeb-11-2019 09:19 AM
โFeb-11-2019 08:29 AM
BarneyS wrote:
Your salesman was mistaken.
Barney