quickrod66 wrote:
thanks for all the info I guess I may have pulled up too far because the call button was high, and I wanted to be able to reach it by standing up in the door of the truck.
I try to centre the truck over the first two scale pads.
And before I go to a CAT scale, I always put a broom handle or some other long pole in the truck's cab. That call button IS high.
Or, you can run over and do your best basketball leap to hit it. Then run back and jump on the running boards. But that got a little embarrassing when there was a line of truck's behind me, and the scale operator was off on a bathroom break.
With a WDH I make 3 trips to the scales.
The first is with the WDH bars cinched up as usual. (1)
Then drive off, release the WDH bars and reweigh. (2)
Then drive off, drop the trailer, and weigh the truck alone. (3)
I try to line up the truck at the same spot each time.
(1)total and (2)total (GCW) should be the same. Compare them to your truck's GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating).
(1)total or (2)total minus (3)total is your trailer's total weight or GVW (Gross Vehicle Weight). Compare that to the trailer's GVWR (GVW Rating).
Tongue weight is the trailer's GVW (calculated above) minus (2)trailer axle weight.
(1)steer, (1)drive and (1)trailer can be compared with the GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating) for the front and rear truck axles and the trailer axle. Add (1)steer and (1)drive them together and compare to the truck's GVWR.
Comparing (1) and (2) weights will show you how the WDH moves weight from the drive axle to the steer and trailer axles.
2014 ORV Timber Ridge 240RKS,8500#,1250# tongue,44K miles
690W Rooftop + 340W Portable Solar,4 GC2s,215Ah@24V
2016 Ram 2500 4x4 RgCab CTD,2507# payload,10.8 mpgUS tow