โFeb-11-2019 05:36 AM
โFeb-27-2019 04:26 AM
Huntindog wrote:Bobbo wrote:You are not understanding what I am saying.Huntindog wrote:
The DC fans fixate on what the cams do.... Letting the TT freely return to center.
What they do not understand is that, yes the cams do resist sway moving away from center, but not towards center,,,,even though motion returning to center is STILL a sway event! Sway is a back and forth motion much like a dogs tail. The EQUALIZER dampens sway in BOTH directions. Perhaps with less resistance that the DC when it is moving away from center, but with much more resistance when moving to center. So the net result is about the same.
Personally, I consider this a GOOD thing. We WANT the trailer to return to center. My opinion of the perfect system is one that resists moving off center, allows free return to center, then resists moving off center in the other direction, damping down the sway but encouraging a centered trailer. That is exactly what the Dual Cam does.
I am sure that you have seen a trailer on the road swaying. It sways in both directions. When it changes directions, it is headed back to center... It doesn't need any help from cams. It will head that way without ANY sway control.
So if you believe that the cams impart a signifignant force towards center (quite a few don't believe this) then it will speed up the motion towards center, When it reaches center it will then encounter resistance in the other direction... Think about it. A 5k -10K weight swinging back and forth, and actually encouraged to sway faster in one direction! If this is actually what happened then it would be felt in the TV as sway.
I don't subscribe to that thinking. Many debates have happened here over the years with our resident engineer Ron Gratz weighing in. His opinion was that the DC is primarily a friction based system. That the cams don't add all that much.
The EQUALIZER without any cams needs no consideration for what cams may or may not do.. It imparts the same sway braking resistance in BOTH directions. slowing down the sway event quickly.
Since both the DC and the EQUALIZER have had great reviews here over many years, it is obvious that they both perform well. They just do it differently
โFeb-27-2019 12:37 AM
Bobbo wrote:You are not understanding what I am saying.Huntindog wrote:
The DC fans fixate on what the cams do.... Letting the TT freely return to center.
What they do not understand is that, yes the cams do resist sway moving away from center, but not towards center,,,,even though motion returning to center is STILL a sway event! Sway is a back and forth motion much like a dogs tail. The EQUALIZER dampens sway in BOTH directions. Perhaps with less resistance that the DC when it is moving away from center, but with much more resistance when moving to center. So the net result is about the same.
Personally, I consider this a GOOD thing. We WANT the trailer to return to center. My opinion of the perfect system is one that resists moving off center, allows free return to center, then resists moving off center in the other direction, damping down the sway but encouraging a centered trailer. That is exactly what the Dual Cam does.
โFeb-22-2019 04:57 PM
โFeb-22-2019 04:26 PM
downtheroad wrote:gpeade wrote:
Equalizer as in brand name, not hitch style.
OK, like I said, maybe I'm confused.
Can you provide a link to an actual Equalizer brand hitch? (not an Equal-i-zer hitch.)
The term equalizer is often used as a generic name for a basic weight distribution hitch.
โFeb-22-2019 04:01 PM
LIKE2BUILD wrote: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.
This is a good point and should be considered when choosing your hitch head style. Typically I've found if the ball coupler is mounted on the top of the trailer A-frame a round bar style hitch works best. This allows the bars to set below the trailer frame and decrease the chance that the head will impact the frame and dislodge the bars.
If the coupler is on the bottom of the frame then a trunion style head works nice and gives you the most ground clearance.
I towed for 10 years with a round bar style Reese Dual Cam it worked flawlessly the entire time. I have ZERO experience on the Equal-I-zer 4-point so I can't say good or bad. If I went back to a TT, I'd use a Dual Cam in a heartbeat simply because it performed perfectly without any failures.
โFeb-20-2019 05:46 AM
Huntindog wrote:
The DC fans fixate on what the cams do.... Letting the TT freely return to center.
What they do not understand is that, yes the cams do resist sway moving away from center, but not towards center,,,,even though motion returning to center is STILL a sway event! Sway is a back and forth motion much like a dogs tail. The EQUALIZER dampens sway in BOTH directions. Perhaps with less resistance that the DC when it is moving away from center, but with much more resistance when moving to center. So the net result is about the same.
โFeb-19-2019 05:10 PM
โFeb-19-2019 08:30 AM
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.
โFeb-12-2019 11:25 AM
TurnThePage wrote:
I don't like how noisy the Equal-I-zer can be when doing slow maneuvers in the camp ground. That can be rectified with a little grease though.
โFeb-12-2019 08:37 AM
โFeb-12-2019 04:50 AM
camperdave wrote:
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.
โFeb-11-2019 09:39 PM
โFeb-11-2019 08:07 PM
dodge guy wrote:
Yes I know what they claim on their site, but physics prove differently! It does work the way I explained!
โFeb-11-2019 07:38 PM