โJul-17-2018 11:38 AM
โJul-20-2018 10:25 AM
myredracer wrote:
You say you had the right tire pressures. Curious what that is? Should be running the TT tires at max sidewall psi. The truck tires can be run up to, or near the max psi rating. I run our rears on our F250 at 80 psi rear and 75 psi on the fronts. I experimented with lower pressures but found 80/75 gave better handling.
If the WDH setup isn't optimized and the TT isn't level to slightly nose down, the new tires can accentuate sway and poor handling.
โJul-20-2018 09:49 AM
โJul-20-2018 08:23 AM
โJul-20-2018 08:13 AM
mkirsch wrote:
Most likely it's been a problem for a while, which was masked by the sway control device. It's now gotten to the point where it is overcoming the sway control device, which is not good.
Take an inventory of what's in the trailer, especially what's behind the axles. You may think nothing has changed, but over time you slowly add-add-add, not really thinking about where you put things, and over time, it adds up. You may find several hundred pounds of unnecessary "stuff" in the rear storage compartments causing your sway problem.
โJul-20-2018 06:27 AM
โJul-19-2018 03:23 PM
โJul-19-2018 11:38 AM
โJul-19-2018 11:34 AM
โJul-19-2018 11:22 AM
mkirsch wrote:
At least you don't have sway. Tire squirm, push-pull, or something else, but it isn't sway.
Sway doesn't come and go. It starts, and continues to escalate until you do something about it, or it does something about you.
โJul-19-2018 10:24 AM
โJul-19-2018 10:16 AM
โJul-19-2018 08:03 AM
โJul-19-2018 07:59 AM
โJul-18-2018 03:50 PM
โJul-18-2018 10:01 AM