Thanks for those pointers. This is a Toy Hauler so I know that they tend to have alot of tongue weight. I have spent alot of time getting the WDH dialed in. I have weighed the truck by itself but loaded with cargo and the truck and trailer loaded together to get a tongue weight.
My truck is a 1999 F250 Super Duty with 35 psi in rear air bags.
I measured the distance from the top of the wheel wells to the ground with the WDH tension and without to get a idea on how much weight I am able to transfer forward.
And what I came up with is Fully Loaded with trailer and cargo dog and the wife I am 250lbs lighter in the front with the trailer and WDH.
So, not happy with this , in my driveway so I dont' have weights for this only measurements, I added one extra washer on the WDH to drop the bars a little so I could get more tension and still have level bars.
Doing this transferred more weight the front, front wheel well measurement dropped and the rear came up. But I had to really lift the truck and trailer with the Jack and it was a bear to get the springs set. So, I was wondering just how much force can I put on those WDH bars!
weights
Truck no trailer but with cargo
front axle 4150
rear axle 3900
Truck with trailer and cargo and WDH
front axle 3900
rear axle 5450
Trailer was 6300 when I weighed it coming home from the dealer
Trailer now 8200 with cargo
2017 Coleman 300tq by Dutchman Toy Hauler. 34.5 feet long and under 10k Gross. 500 watt Solar 2000 watt Inverter, 1999 Ford F250 2WD 7.3 4R100 DP Tuner, S&B Cold Air Intake, Gauges, 6.0 Trans Cooler, Air Bags.