โDec-16-2013 12:07 PM
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โDec-16-2013 02:28 PM
Bob Landry wrote:In order to transfer 300# back onto the steer axle, the WDH would have to transferred about 150# to the TT axles and would have removed about 450# from the drive axle.
If you have a conventional tow trailer with a tongue weight of 1000 and with a properly adjusted WD, 300lbs is transferred back to the steering axle and the remaining 700lbs is transferred back to the trailer axles, how much weight have you added to the payload of the truck besides the weight of the hitch?
โDec-16-2013 01:32 PM
K Charles wrote:Correct, before application of weight distributing spring bars. After spring bars are hooked up, some weight is transferred to trailer axles, as Barney stated.
If yo have a trailer with a a tongue weight of 1000 lb and you put it on your hitch then you added 1000 lb to your payload.
โDec-16-2013 01:31 PM
โDec-16-2013 01:31 PM
TomG2 wrote:Agreed.
...What you asked is not reality. One would not want to transfer all thousand pounds off the rear axle, even if it were possible.
โDec-16-2013 01:30 PM
BarneyS wrote:That is correct.
I think I am right in the following. If not, I'm sure Ron or somebody else will be along to correct me. ๐
Roughly speaking you have added around 700lbs to the payload.
That 300lbs that was transferred back to the truck front axle is weight that was leveraged off of it by placing the tongue on the ball, not weight added from the tongue. The weight on the axles before drawing up the WD bars would be around 1300lbs - 1000 from the tongue and 300 from the front axle of the truck.
Then about 300lbs of the 1000lbs is transferred back to the trailer axles leaving about 700lbs of the 1000lbs left on the truck to be subtracted from the trucks payload.
Barney
โDec-16-2013 12:59 PM
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