Aug-10-2019 03:26 PM
Aug-13-2019 08:25 PM
Aug-13-2019 03:24 PM
Acdii wrote:This is an excellent post.Bigfoot2005 wrote:Bigfoot2005 wrote:opnspaces wrote:
Seems like 1200 lb bars to me. I don't think the weight in the bed comes into play.
When you do the calculation on their website they ask for the bed weight i guess because you are transferring weight from the rear axle and anything over the axle adds to the transfer weight
What is the issue with having to stiff of the bars? 1400 versus 1200
I can tell you exactly what the issue will be, Just found this out myself.
I had done some calculations prior to buying my Blue Ox, and had come up with a receiver weight of 1200 pounds. That is the weight of the trailer tongue as well as the hitch itself. So I went and got the 1500 pound BO.
As far as distributing weight, it worked perfectly, transferred everything properly, BUT I could not get the required bar tension for the sway control to function. When I did, it lifted the rear too much, and dropped the front end past the unloaded fender height.
I wound up with having to buy a new set of 1000 pound bars that resolved the issue.
Turns out when I did my calculations I had included adding a rack above the LP tanks to mount an 80 pound Generator, which would have added 130 pounds to the 890 the tongue weighs now, putting me over the 1000 pound mark for tongue weight, but when I finally got around to measuring the A frame to see if the rack would fit, which it wont, I had already bought the BO and set it up.
So no, bigger bars will not work, they cannot be tensioned enough if the weight isn't there, and will not apply the proper sway control.
What is required to get an accurate weight for the spring bars is three things, the weight of the trailer tongue, the weight of the hitch itself, and the weight of anything in the bed behind the rear axle. I never added anything behind the axle, it all fit in front of it, so even though I carry the generator in the bed, it is not carried by the receiver.
Generally, anything carried by the receiver is what you size the bars to, not the hitch. The receiver is that socket under the bumper, not the hitch the trailer connects to, some folks get that part wrong, so just want to make sure it is understood the difference.
If you don't have the trailer and need a rough estimate, take the curb weight, which is the UVW, and add at least 1000-1200 pounds to it for cargo and water, and use that number * 13%. So say the UVW is 5000, like mine, I carry 1500 pounds of cargo, and weigh 6550. 6550 * .13 = 851. Mine is closer to 13.5%, hence 890 pounds.
Aug-13-2019 01:51 PM
Bigfoot2005 wrote:Bigfoot2005 wrote:opnspaces wrote:
Seems like 1200 lb bars to me. I don't think the weight in the bed comes into play.
When you do the calculation on their website they ask for the bed weight i guess because you are transferring weight from the rear axle and anything over the axle adds to the transfer weight
What is the issue with having to stiff of the bars? 1400 versus 1200
Aug-11-2019 06:37 PM
obwan2 wrote:I have owned a 10K, 12K, and now a 14K.
Quote from Equal-i-zer's Randy Workman "The bars on the 12k and 14k are actually the same, the only difference in the two hitches is the Hitch head"
Aug-11-2019 04:12 PM
obwan2 wrote:
Quote from Equal-i-zer's Randy Workman "The bars on the 12k and 14k are actually the same, the only difference in the two hitches is the Hitch head"
Aug-11-2019 03:46 PM
Aug-11-2019 12:33 PM
Fordlover wrote:
When I approached the manufacturer about this concern, they said go with the heavier bars, as the hitch can be adjusted to distribute the proper weight.
This isn’t my advice, simply what the experts told me.
Aug-11-2019 10:20 AM
Aug-11-2019 09:10 AM
Aug-11-2019 07:14 AM
Aug-10-2019 05:31 PM
delwhjr wrote:There would be no downside IF, and only IF your TT frame can handle a stiffer than needed bar. One of my TTs manuals stated what size bars were permissable, depending on how thick the frame was. That was back in 2001. TT frames have not gotten heavier duty since then.Bigfoot2005 wrote:
Hey guys
Will be getting a new Imagine 2800BH next year and looking into getting a Equal-i-zer Hitch
I did the hitch size calculator on their website and it is telling me to get the 1400 lb version.
GTW - 7995 lbs
Tongue weight - Dry 604 lbs - Rough actual - 13% is 1039 lbs
Cargo weight in bed of truck - 400 lbs
Truck hitch says max is 1250 lbs
is 1400 lbs bars to stiff or should I go with the 1200 lb version
All figures are estimates but close
When I moved to my current trailer, I contacted Equal-i-zer on the question of which hitch. I was using a 1/10 and would need to go to at least the 12/12. The rep said there would be no downside to going to the 14/14 vs the 12/12. I am glad I went with the 14/14, as now I won't have to replace hitch if I go a little heavier with the next trailer. It has performed great.
Aug-10-2019 05:19 PM
Bigfoot2005 wrote:
Hey guys
Will be getting a new Imagine 2800BH next year and looking into getting a Equal-i-zer Hitch
I did the hitch size calculator on their website and it is telling me to get the 1400 lb version.
GTW - 7995 lbs
Tongue weight - Dry 604 lbs - Rough actual - 13% is 1039 lbs
Cargo weight in bed of truck - 400 lbs
Truck hitch says max is 1250 lbs
is 1400 lbs bars to stiff or should I go with the 1200 lb version
All figures are estimates but close
Aug-10-2019 05:17 PM
Hannibal wrote:
Stiffer bars put more stress on the A frame to chassis point of the trailer as well. Picture if the bars didn't give at all. The A frame would have to.
Aug-10-2019 04:39 PM