Aug-28-2023 09:28 AM
Sep-07-2023 02:00 PM
nickthehunter wrote:
Geez guys, it’s a first time poster, cut him/her some slack. Maybe you could be a little nicer and explain what you need to know and why it matters and quit being a NPA.
Sep-01-2023 11:06 AM
Grit dog wrote:
Mkirsch, you’re getting too practical again….
Aug-31-2023 11:15 AM
Aug-31-2023 11:03 AM
Samsonsworld wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
More tongue weight is almost always better...so long as you don't overload the truck.
If you are saying too much weight up front is better than too much weight in the back, I would agree, but even with a 3/4 ton you can raise your front end considerably if you aren't balancing the load.
Aug-31-2023 08:25 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
More tongue weight is almost always better...so long as you don't overload the truck.
Aug-31-2023 07:31 AM
Aug-31-2023 07:30 AM
Aug-31-2023 06:10 AM
Samsonsworld wrote:
The tongue can be offset some with a distribution hitch but too much weight up front will lead too bad handling...same as too much weight on back. I've towed heavy/light, UTVs/ATVs, boats, RVs and you want 10-15% on the tongue. It's a balancing act that may take trial and error.
Aug-31-2023 05:32 AM
Aug-31-2023 04:30 AM
Aug-30-2023 08:40 PM
valhalla360 wrote:Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Ok, I'll be odd man out.
I would NOT put the SBS as far forward as you can. Especially if you are towing with a 1/2 ton. That's crazy.
Toy haulers are notoriously tongue heavy and you are being told to make it even more tongue heavy. Sorry, but this is the wrong thing to do.
The best thing to do is put it on a scale and load the SBS where your TH has 15% tongue weight and call it good.
I've yet to see a rear loading toy hauler (there used to be some with a front loading bay) where the toys sit in front of the axles. So the toy isn't going to increase the tongue weight.
The reason empty toy haulers are tongue heavy is to compensate for the fact the heavy toy will be behind the axles and reduce tongue weight once loaded. The OP is putting a very heavy toy (relative to the payload capacity), so he very likely needs to get the center of gravity of the toy as far forward as possible or he risks being too light on tongue weight.
Of course, we see a toy hauler that is likely maxed out or over weight once loaded (he only as 700lb left after loading the toy), good chance he has an under spec'd truck...so far he has not came back and shared any info on the actual truck or trailer. There is a good chance the tongue weight will push the truck over it's payload.
I do agree with you that actually getting scaled weights makes a lot of sense and 15% would be a good target though it may overload his truck. I wouldn't go under 12% though...starts to become a bit of a game when running everything at max.
Aug-30-2023 11:02 AM
op wrote:
Any suggestions for this new guy would be greatly appreciated. Thanks in advance.
Aug-30-2023 07:25 AM
Aug-30-2023 05:04 AM
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
Ok, I'll be odd man out.
I would NOT put the SBS as far forward as you can. Especially if you are towing with a 1/2 ton. That's crazy.
Toy haulers are notoriously tongue heavy and you are being told to make it even more tongue heavy. Sorry, but this is the wrong thing to do.
The best thing to do is put it on a scale and load the SBS where your TH has 15% tongue weight and call it good.