โSep-09-2016 06:39 PM
โSep-14-2016 01:54 PM
Farmerjon wrote:
Hah. You can find most anything on a Farm. There is no wrong answer. On our farm and others in our area a lot of the stuff we tow use a simple pin that drops thru the draw bar. as the equipment gets heavier the type of connection gets heavier. Our wagons have the simple pinned draw bars and we may pull more than one wagon at a time.
But what one area and type and size of farm does may be very different from other farmers. So to question what Dodge Guy is telling you is really uncalled for.
Back to the OP's original question I for one still thinkHouston Remodeler wrote:
A little dab'll do ya
โSep-14-2016 09:41 AM
Houston Remodeler wrote:
A little dab'll do ya
โSep-14-2016 08:19 AM
Muddydogs wrote:dodge guy wrote:
yep, your right. I should have thrown that in there. most farm implements have four wheels and a tongue that swings down, so the tongue weight is only about 15 lbs! even a boat has minimal tongue weight.
Do you know anything about farm equipment? First you claim most farm trailers have hooks and now you claim most farm implements have four wheels and no tongue weight. Me thinks not.
โSep-14-2016 07:48 AM
โSep-14-2016 07:18 AM
Muddydogs wrote:dodge guy wrote:
yep, your right. I should have thrown that in there. most farm implements have four wheels and a tongue that swings down, so the tongue weight is only about 15 lbs! even a boat has minimal tongue weight.
Do you know anything about farm equipment? First you claim most farm trailers have hooks and now you claim most farm implements have four wheels and no tongue weight. Me thinks not.
โSep-14-2016 05:24 AM
dodge guy wrote:
yep, your right. I should have thrown that in there. most farm implements have four wheels and a tongue that swings down, so the tongue weight is only about 15 lbs! even a boat has minimal tongue weight.
โSep-13-2016 09:33 PM
โSep-13-2016 07:42 PM
dewey02 wrote:
This thread seems to have taken on a "greasers vs non-greasers" argument.
Now, where have we seen that before?
โSep-13-2016 07:41 PM
CavemanCharlie wrote:dodge guy wrote:
Yes, when maintained properly grease does not ruin a ball/coupler from dirt. On my long trips of 1-3000 miles I have never had any grit in the grease. And of course a farm implement store will tell you no grease, they operate in dirty/dusty environments. Not too mention that the majority of those hitches are pintle hooks!
I have the same ball for 13 years and it shows no signs of galling. My buddies hitch OTOH he never lubes it and it shows! The ball has gouges in it, and we have had to retorque a few times already! He just refuses to put on some grease because it is just one more step. I don't think he even carries any type of grease with him even for wheel bearings!
No pintle hooks on farms that I live and work on around here. In fact, I've only seen one of them in 50 years.
Either a regular bumper hitch ball or a 5th wheel goose neck is waht we have. No grease on them.
But, I am beginning to believe that this ball wear problem is related to the Weight Distribution Hitch device. It puts more force on the ball. Grease may be needed in these cases. Nothing on the farm has one of those.
โSep-13-2016 07:00 PM
โSep-13-2016 06:43 PM
dodge guy wrote:
Yes, when maintained properly grease does not ruin a ball/coupler from dirt. On my long trips of 1-3000 miles I have never had any grit in the grease. And of course a farm implement store will tell you no grease, they operate in dirty/dusty environments. Not too mention that the majority of those hitches are pintle hooks!
I have the same ball for 13 years and it shows no signs of galling. My buddies hitch OTOH he never lubes it and it shows! The ball has gouges in it, and we have had to retorque a few times already! He just refuses to put on some grease because it is just one more step. I don't think he even carries any type of grease with him even for wheel bearings!
โSep-13-2016 08:47 AM
โSep-12-2016 02:24 PM
โSep-12-2016 02:17 PM