Aug-01-2017 01:16 PM
Aug-08-2017 09:07 AM
Hannibal wrote:
Reese and Drawtite are the same. Manufactured by Cequent.
http://www.cequentgroup.com/Brand/All/
Aug-07-2017 12:10 PM
Hannibal wrote:
Reese and Drawtite are the same. Manufactured by Cequent.
http://www.cequentgroup.com/Brand/All/
Aug-07-2017 11:43 AM
Aug-07-2017 05:59 AM
Aug-06-2017 06:09 PM
deltabravo wrote:stevemorris wrote:
second those equalizer bars look kinda light too, and the safety chains are too small
Ditto on the bars being way too tight.
Aug-04-2017 12:34 PM
mrw8i wrote:
Wow. This is the 2nd time I've seen where CW allowed someone tow a trailer out of their parking lot in an unsafe condition. Same thing on both 2" ball. The 1st time I saw it was a neighbor of mine. Not even a WD hitch in that case. I was going for a walk and he and another neighbor were staring at the truck/trailer combination hooked up and wondering what they could do to level the trailer and truck - it was a significant "V" shape with the rear of the trailer very high and the front of the truck very high. He had just got back from his first 200 mile camping trip. It was so bad, he was loading the rear of the trailer with weight. He was talking about air bags - I informed of WD hitches. I had a used (two year old) WD hitch I was no longer using with 1200 and 1000 lb bars. I sold him the setup - same as the OP, with the 100 lb bars then helped him install it. That's when I found he had a 2" ball.
I spent the afternoon helping him setup the WD hitch. Had him test drive it. Talked about weight distribution in the trailer, safe speed, swaying, level of trailer, etc. How full tanks could change the dynamics, as you use water it moves from the water tank to the gray/black tanks - possibly upsetting the weights in the trailer. By the end of the afternoon he was happy with how much better it drove.
Aug-04-2017 12:30 PM
Aug-04-2017 11:49 AM
Aug-03-2017 09:30 PM
stevemorris wrote:
second those equalizer bars look kinda light too, and the safety chains are too small
Aug-03-2017 08:02 PM
Aug-03-2017 12:22 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:proxim2020 wrote:
I would definitely look into a more heavy duty hitch. I would load up the trailer and run it across a scale to see exactly how heavy it is. Chances are you're already at or over capacity of your current hitch since it appears to be slightly bent. A safe bet would be to calculate your tongue weight at GVWR of the trailer and purchase a hitch that has at least that capacity. This would be the heaviest tongue weight the hitch would ever carry. Look at what's stamped on the coupler, but chances are you should be using a 2 5/16 ball.
The hitch he has is rated for up to a 10K lb trailer. The 800 lb bars he has (which is all that saved him a ton of grief by holding the entire mess together) may, or may not be heavy enough, but as in my earlier post 1000lb bars for that model Curt hitch are only $130 or less. The 2" ball let loose, and the head flange bent as well, because the trailer was banging back and forth into it. I would bet more than the farm his trailer has a 2-5/16" coupler. Probably good he had the Curt as the head is plate steel. If it would of been cast like the Reese it may have cracked right in half at the ball.
Why does he need a more heavy duty hitch? Nothing wrong at all with a conventional round bar WDH. There are literally millions of them in use.
Aug-03-2017 10:36 AM
Aug-03-2017 08:04 AM
Aug-03-2017 07:52 AM