โMay-30-2016 12:28 PM
โJun-13-2016 08:29 PM
โJun-13-2016 07:01 PM
CavemanCharlie wrote:Acdii wrote:CavemanCharlie wrote:
Letting up on the "Go Pedal" when it starts wiggling is the wrong thing to do. Slow and Steady wins the race. Keeping up a constant speed is best. You want to tow the trailer and not let it push you !
On the other hand, Having your had ready to tap the brakes if needed is the perfect thing to do !! Kudos to you for knowing that.
I don't know who taught you that, but that is actually incorrect. Increasing speed can and will amplify the sway. Backing off the throttle when sway begins is the correct way to manage sway, OTOH if sway is to the point where the TV is moving left and right, tapping the trailer brakes before letting up is the only method that will prevent a jack knife. If you don't have trailer brakes, and you let sway build up to where the TV is moving, then you are screwed.
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I understand. I did not explain myself very well. I do that a lot. I did not mean to say that you should Increase your speed. I was just afraid that you, or someone else, would take there foot completely off of the throttle. Doing that on some vehicles would cause the tow vehicle to start pushing and you don't want that.
I usually just hold my speed steady and tap the trailer brakes. No one taught me this. There are no towing classes around here.
I wish there was. Heck, they threw me in the semi and told me to drive it without ever telling me how. lol
โJun-13-2016 06:27 PM
myredracer wrote:
Every time you get hit by a hard sudden blast of side wind, the driver tries to maintain a straight course on the road by making a steering wheel correction but when the wind suddenly slows down or stops for a moment, you will have over-corrected somewhat which then makes it harder to control. The continual left/right movement of the TT will be harder to control the faster you are going. The only thing you can do is really slow down and better yet, pull over and stop.
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โJun-13-2016 06:17 PM
Acdii wrote:CavemanCharlie wrote:
Letting up on the "Go Pedal" when it starts wiggling is the wrong thing to do. Slow and Steady wins the race. Keeping up a constant speed is best. You want to tow the trailer and not let it push you !
On the other hand, Having your had ready to tap the brakes if needed is the perfect thing to do !! Kudos to you for knowing that.
I don't know who taught you that, but that is actually incorrect. Increasing speed can and will amplify the sway. Backing off the throttle when sway begins is the correct way to manage sway, OTOH if sway is to the point where the TV is moving left and right, tapping the trailer brakes before letting up is the only method that will prevent a jack knife. If you don't have trailer brakes, and you let sway build up to where the TV is moving, then you are screwed.
.
โJun-13-2016 12:26 PM
myredracer wrote:
We drove from Spokane to Seattle on the I-90 once with gusting side winds around 40+ mph. It felt like I was towing on marbles and was a pretty unnerving feeling even when I slowed to well under 50 mph. We pulled over at a truck stop and a semi driver told us that they can sometimes get blown over. Got to the CG and someone there said he has seen some FWs on their side along that I-90 stretch.
โJun-13-2016 12:24 PM
โJun-13-2016 11:45 AM
The moment your trailer shows any tendency to sway,
you should slow down immediately by removing your
foot from the accelerator. Avoid strong or hard tow
vehicle braking unless there is a danger of collision.
Reduce speed gradually whenever possible. Apply the
brakes gently and progressively. A properly adjusted
brake controller will apply the trailer brakes first. If
you can do so safely, use the brake hand controller to
gradually apply the trailer brakes. This will help to keep
the vehicles aligned. If you apply the tow vehicle brakes
only, trailer stability will be reduced, and skidding the
tow vehicle tires can cause loss of control and jackknif-
ing.
โJun-13-2016 11:00 AM
โJun-13-2016 10:30 AM
โJun-13-2016 08:32 AM
โJun-13-2016 07:52 AM
CavemanCharlie wrote:
Letting up on the "Go Pedal" when it starts wiggling is the wrong thing to do. Slow and Steady wins the race. Keeping up a constant speed is best. You want to tow the trailer and not let it push you !
On the other hand, Having your had ready to tap the brakes if needed is the perfect thing to do !! Kudos to you for knowing that.
โJun-09-2016 07:02 PM
Acdii wrote:
I just got a Coleman 274BH, and drove it home with my F150. I weighed the entire rig, with full tank of fuel, and empty water/waste tanks. Looks like weight distribution is good, have 400# difference between front and rear axles, and 4800# for the trailer. I have a Husky WDH with 800# bars, The TV setup is incorrect though, and I am a little miffed that Camping World didn't go the extra step and readjust my hitch so the trailer was level and not nose up, I mean what is that $995 prep fee for anyway?
Anyhow, the winds today were very strong, 15-20 MPH steady with gusts up to 30+, and sway was a killer for me. It was NNW winds and I was heading southeast, so it was quartering me. I could see the trailer wagging tail on my mirrors, so drove home doing 60-65, took foot off the go pedal when it started wagging, with my hand ready to tap the trailer brakes if needed. While it wasn't white knuckle bad, it was still enough to make my first trip with the trailer uncomfortable. I don't know if having the trailer perfectly level would have reduced the amount of sway or not, but I am looking to get a different WDH that has sway control built in.
Hard to imagine the TT is lower than my horse trailer, and I thought it would be the other way around.
โJun-06-2016 10:00 PM
Acdii wrote:
... The TV setup is incorrect though, and I am a little miffed that Camping World didn't go the extra step and readjust my hitch so the trailer was level and not nose up, I mean what is that $995 prep fee for anyway?
Anyhow, the winds today were very strong, 15-20 MPH steady with gusts up to 30+, and sway was a killer for me. It was NNW winds and I was heading southeast, so it was quartering me. I could see the trailer wagging tail on my mirrors, so drove home doing 60-65, took foot off the go pedal when it started wagging, with my hand ready to tap the trailer brakes if needed. While it wasn't white knuckle bad, it was still enough to make my first trip with the trailer uncomfortable. I don't know if having the trailer perfectly level would have reduced the amount of sway or not, but I am looking to get a different WDH that has sway control built in.
โJun-06-2016 07:57 PM