At a CAT SCALE location (get phone app).
— Initial Weigh: Adjusted (true) TARE Weight. With only driver aboard with fuel topped off and ONLY permanent gear aboard (remains until truck sold); put truck across scale. Park, and retrieve paper copy of scale ticket at fuel desk.
This is the genuine Empty Weight. The truck will never weigh less than this. Take a pic of door sticker showing TIRE, AXLE, WHEEL Ratings. Note range remaining FF/RR.
The difference between Scale Values and Stated Limits, is the necessary information.
To set a WDH, go to the CAN AM RV website and find the magazine article link on, “
How To Set Your Torsion Bars”. Use this process (enlist a friend) and do this work at home to get the basics of the WDH in the ballpark. (Trailer needs to be level within itself; carpenters level across doorway after hitch adjusted; in the bubble). Truck may be tail-down slightly; not important.
A). To use the CAT Scale to further refine WDH settings:
The Rig loaded for a camping trip, where
1). Full fresh water & propane on trailer
2). Fuel topped off at truck stop arrival
3). All passengers aboard
I).
First Scale PassWith WDH as well-adjusted as per above article. II).
Second Scale PassThe same; except that WDH “slack” (no tension). III).
Third Scale Pass The same; except that trailer was unhitched & parked. — The short version of “correct” is that the Steer Axle value in I & III
are the same. — Go over loading: any gear in pickup bed
must be secured against movement IN ANY DIRECTION and MUST have its weight ON OR AHEAD of the Axle center.
— The closer the pickup is to a 50/50 FF/RR weight balance
before hitching the better will be the final results. (Too much spring capacity is detrimental; a penalty. )
A WDH works by spreading the FORCE exerted by the long lever represented from hitch ball back to trailer axle center. TW is pretty well meaningless. Has NOTHING to do with “payload”. It’s a placeholder number, only.
— The ideal is a distribution of TW force by 1/3-1/3-1/3 across Steer, Drive and Trailer Axles. Instead of concentrating this pounding at one point, the load is spread across the whole of the rig.
—In practice, about 70-75% remains on the TV, 25-30% on the TT. This IMPROVES steering, handling & braking.
— True TW shown
— The hitch, once closed
is now a steering component.
Understand the centrality of this and all the dumb RVer misconceptions go away. . The trailer is CONSTANTLY moving in and out of a three-dimensional plane aligned with the TV. It is in rotation (oscillation), and both loads AND UNLOADS the hitch ball over time (fourth dimension).
— This is also how one sets correct tire pressure. Get a cold overnight reading before leaving home. Make corrections (inside vehicle manufacturers door sticker range) from the Load & Pressure Table for that Load Range Tire. Not over or under. Get it dead-on. (Do NOT use tire pressure to alter handling feel. Get better shocks, poly antiroll bar bushings and rear Panhard Rod).
— Besides 90% failure rates to set hitch rigging correctly, wrong tire pressure is a default in a campground check of rigs. Both are vital.
— Getting hitch ball as close to rear bumper as possible (length of secondary lever; cut shorter & re-weld), it may be necessary to use a hitch specialist to also set hitch ball HEIGHT with pinpoint accuracy. Inches count. Seriously. That second lever is what forces rear TV tires sideways.
This is the ballgame: those few square inches of the Drive Axle Tire contact patches. — The hitch rigging is
Equal in importance to the selection of the two vehicles.
A 4WD solid-axle pickup with a box-shaped trailer riding on leaf spring suspension
is the worst towing combination on the highway. Take the time to iron out the details.
One is looking for two things:
1). For a given tow vehicle, tire pressure valued empty and loaded/hitched.
2). The full range of WDH settings for a given combined vehicle.
In both cases, these are narrow from low to high.
Make notes. Keep records. Get the baseline, final adjust, and check at least annually.
.
2004 555 CTD QC LB NV-5600
1990 35’ Silver Streak