โSep-08-2015 04:19 PM
โSep-11-2015 09:07 AM
โSep-11-2015 06:04 AM
partimcmpr wrote:
Some of the comments puzzle me. The implication is that a trailer which needs sway control is 'improperly loaded'??? And that a trailer 'shouldn't need sway control???
Or am I misunderstanding when sway control is needed?
And to jump ahead a bit, it is impractical, if not next to impossible to get weights needed to 'properly load' a trailer.
โSep-11-2015 05:50 AM
TomG2 wrote:
A well engineered and properly loaded trailer with a capable tow vehicle will not sway going down the highway under normal conditions. There are a hundred things that can make one sway and there are a few devices that claim to overpower this tendency. I like the first three things that I mentioned best.
โSep-11-2015 05:42 AM
โSep-10-2015 02:38 PM
โSep-10-2015 01:23 PM
โSep-10-2015 07:27 AM
TomG2 wrote:
GM says that WD hitch is not required. Sway control may be necessary to tame a squirrely trailer, but most of us prefer to eliminate sway before adding sway devices.
โSep-10-2015 04:55 AM
TomG2 wrote:
From the 2013 Silverado Owner's manual, which agrees with what is written on the hitch:
"2500/ 3500 Long Box
Weight Carrying or Weight Distributing
907kg (2,000lb)"
It is 1,500 pounds for the short bed models.
โSep-09-2015 05:45 PM
โSep-09-2015 01:00 PM
โSep-09-2015 12:08 PM
TomG2 wrote:
My 2013 long bed 2500HD is marked V-5 2,000 pounds. GM had some hitch problems a few years ago and really upgraded their receiver hitches.
โSep-09-2015 10:59 AM
โSep-09-2015 09:00 AM
โSep-09-2015 08:11 AM
TomG2 wrote:
GM says that WD hitch is not required. Sway control may be necessary to tame a squirrely trailer, but most of us prefer to eliminate sway before adding sway devices.