โJun-03-2013 05:02 PM
โJun-04-2013 09:22 PM
โJun-04-2013 12:46 PM
Campin LI wrote:
Your thread reminds me of what happened to me about 2-3 years ago.
I tow a Jayco 32BHDS with a Ford Excursion. The first hitch I had was a Reese dual cam with round bars, just like yours. I bent snap brackets and even a cam arm. Tore the cam arm support bolts out of the frame just like you did. Adjustments like crazy never worked. I worked with a Reese tech and I adjusted exactly as he recommended each time. Reese was great and replaced each part every time it got bent. Eventually they replaced the entire system because it was all bent up with a newer version that required holes in a different spot for the cam support bracket. Even that never worked. I threw in the towel and ended up switching to an Equal-I-zer hitch and it has towed great since the change, with only the initial setup which didn't take long at all. I did add a nut and bolt through the center of the L-bracket brackets to keep them from sliding back on the frame during real tight turns.
I think the round bar style hitch coupled up with a heavy tongue weight and bottom mounted trailer coupler is just a bad match - but that is just my opinion which is based on nothing but my experience. To me it looks like you should be done with that hitch at this point and move on so you can enjoy your vacations.
โJun-04-2013 12:41 PM
Ron Gratz wrote:9one1! wrote:After you reduced the amount of rearward tilt and decreased the number of links under tension,
---The bars pop so loud that they can be heard three towns away. It doesn't do anything for the sway as I pulled over half way home from the last trip and took them off and it wiggled less then with them on.
did you notice any difference in the noise or any difference in the sway stability?
Did you ever try putting Vaseline on the cams to reduce the noise?
Ron
โJun-04-2013 12:18 PM
โJun-04-2013 09:39 AM
9one1! wrote:After you reduced the amount of rearward tilt and decreased the number of links under tension,
---The bars pop so loud that they can be heard three towns away. It doesn't do anything for the sway as I pulled over half way home from the last trip and took them off and it wiggled less then with them on.
โJun-04-2013 08:46 AM
BarneyS wrote:
If it were my trailer, I would put the head tilt back where it was, adjust the chain links to give the amount of WD necessary, and CHECK CAREFULLY that the V of the WD bars is centered EXACTLY on the cam lobe.
The angle of the cam arms does not matter as they do not move and are fixed at the front where they attach to the A frame. The cam itself is round so the bars can slide on it no matter what the angle of the arms is. All the cam/chains do is hold up the WD bars. Actually, the angle you had first is good as it gives lots of clearance between the cam arms and the WD bars. Many have problems in this area which leads to bent/broken arms or hitch heads.
In the second picture, the pressure on the WD bars will increase greatly as you turn. The inside bar slides on the cam and could put too much strain on the snap up brackets.
Also, with the Dual Cam, it is not critical that the chains be exactly vertical. That is a requirement on the normal hitches because the chains swing back and forth when turning but not so with the Dual Cam. The chains do not move at all. All they do is hold up the cam.
From looking at your pictures, I suspect that you do not have the cams exactly centered on the V of the bars. If they are not, then they will constantly fight with each other to keep the trailer centered and you will have lots of sway like motions.
Take a look at the hitch setup thread stuck at the top of this forum for information on the Dual Cam setup and what I was just talking about. It has lots of good pictures by JBarca to help explain.
Barney
โJun-04-2013 08:28 AM
โJun-04-2013 08:24 AM
โJun-04-2013 07:13 AM
โJun-04-2013 06:07 AM
โJun-03-2013 09:45 PM
โJun-03-2013 08:22 PM
โJun-03-2013 07:04 PM
netaq wrote:
This is interesting.....we have similar trucks, trailers, and hitches but I am not having any sway issues at all. I did spend a couple hours adjusting the hitch in a parking lot after the dealer installed it. The dealer had it riding too nose high without enough tension in the bars. I have 1200# ones like you. Getting the hitch angle was trial and error with a measuring tape.
โJun-03-2013 06:59 PM
โJun-03-2013 06:57 PM
Ron Gratz wrote:9one1! wrote:With an under-mount coupler, I'm guessing your cam support arms are at a very steep angle.
The other variable with the trailer is that it has an under slung coupler which is why Reece said to bolt the snap up bracket for added support.
If so, the friction of the cam acting against a very steep bar slope can exert unusually high forces on the lift chain.
Is it possible for you to raise the rear ends of the WD bars by reducing the amount of ball mount tilt and decreasing the number of chain links under tension?
This would position the bars at a less-steep angle and might eliminate some of your problems.
If you have a close up photo of a bar, cam, and lift chain when the TT is attached to the TV, that would give us a better basis for providing comments.
Ron