โMar-19-2018 02:10 PM
โFeb-04-2019 10:00 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:
I'd say a combination of the 20" low profile tires and the soft springs designed for ride. Try a pair of Hellwig progressive helpers on the TV, or put some real wheels and tires on and not those public impression generators. You'll still never "not know its back there".
โFeb-04-2019 08:08 AM
โFeb-04-2019 07:29 AM
โFeb-03-2019 05:56 AM
โFeb-02-2019 06:21 AM
bid_time wrote:
Seems the oleman is having a senior moment/day. Every post he has responded to today is at least 6 months old.
โFeb-02-2019 05:55 AM
โFeb-02-2019 04:01 AM
โFeb-01-2019 10:38 PM
WNYBob wrote:
Yes balance makes a big difference, do you have at least 12% of the total weight of the TT (not 12% of the dry wt.)
Next what tires are you running? 'P'? I upgraded to 'E' rated and also upgraded the suspension. OEM plastic bushings were shot. Went to bronze bushings and wet bolts, plus a cushioned equalizer (EZ-Flex by Dexter)
This reduced my sway 10 fold!
โApr-30-2018 08:10 AM
โApr-30-2018 08:01 AM
myredracer wrote:
Minimizing sway is normally a combination of different things. Good call on upgrading to LRD tires. I didn't see where you stated what the TV tires are. You want LT tires and raise the psi in them. I run our LRE at 80 psi at rear and 75 on front for towing. Shocks on a TT can really help a lot and sure did on our TT. Not a simple bolt-on project tho. HD Bilsteins (or equivalent) on the TV can also help.
FWIW, if going through BC to Alaska, gas prices are predicted to be up around $8-9 USD/gal due to a war between BC & Alberta gov'ts. Alberta is threatening to cut off oil supplies to BC unless it stops it's objection to the Keystone XL project which is the heart of the issue. Gas is already over $7 USD/gal here and it always goes up a lot over the summer. You might want to stay out of BC for as much of the trip as you can. I just filled up in Bellingham WA at $3.13 USD/gal.
โApr-30-2018 07:40 AM
โApr-29-2018 01:46 PM
โMar-21-2018 10:38 AM
Jimbee wrote:I would agree with this. A good example is look at semi truck trailers, most of the weight is on the back of the truck. RV'S are a compromise with axle placement to not exceed tow vehicle weight ratings.
When it comes to stability tongue weight is your friend with longer trailers! If your Passport is like mine your fresh water tank is at the front of the camper under the bed. Try towing with the fresh water tank full as this may add enough weight to help with the see-saw affect these longer trailers sometimes are plagued with.
Good luck!
โMar-21-2018 10:36 AM
dodge guy wrote:I would disagree with this as long as the tow vehicle rear axle is not overloaded. I have a Cherokee F-30 and use a Diesel Excursion or my truck. I also have a Cherokee TH that has the axles towards the rear while the F-30 Cherokee axles are closer to the middle. The TH tows like it is on rails behind the truck with lots more tongue weight because of where the axles are located. The F-30 Cherokee does not handle near as well with the axles close to the middle and considerable less tongue weight towed with the same vehicles. Neither trailer exceeds tow vehicle weight ratings which could lead to handling issues as well as unloading the front axle of your tow vehicle, that's where a good Equalizer hitch is involved.
What is your loaded tongue weight! On my trailer I had too much tongue weight and it pushed my Excursion around o was over 15%! I Moved stuff around to get it to 12% and it towed much better. Sometimes too much tongue weight is as bad as too little. I would also recommend using a Reese Dual Cam hitch.
The Burb can handle that trailer if set up properly with a good sway control hitch.