โAug-25-2022 02:48 PM
โSep-06-2022 09:14 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
I understand perfectly what you are saying.
So when the WDH is connected and fully engaged...Does the frame and suspension of your truck see:
- The receiver load (and associated moment arm).
or
- The theoretical trailer hitch load that would be present with the WDH portion of the hitch disengaged.
โSep-05-2022 04:49 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
It reduces the reciever LOAD. It doesn't alter the trailer tongue weight.
READ and TRY to understand the mechanics involved! It's a pretty simple statics problem.
โSep-01-2022 09:47 AM
valhalla360 wrote:
Funny...the very first post in the diagram is a statement "TV Receiver Load WDH Removes 300lb"
โSep-01-2022 07:43 AM
valhalla360 wrote:ktmrfs wrote:Huntindog wrote:
If you really want to "know" how it works. click on this link.
Or you can find it in the towing forum.
It has been a sticky there for years.
Ron Gratz explains WD
yes, great reference and a good summary of a force analysis one would learn in a statics 101 ME class.
Funny...the very first post in the diagram is a statement "TV Receiver Load WDH Removes 300lb"
โSep-01-2022 05:39 AM
ktmrfs wrote:Huntindog wrote:
If you really want to "know" how it works. click on this link.
Or you can find it in the towing forum.
It has been a sticky there for years.
Ron Gratz explains WD
yes, great reference and a good summary of a force analysis one would learn in a statics 101 ME class.
โAug-31-2022 04:16 PM
Huntindog wrote:
If you really want to "know" how it works. click on this link.
Or you can find it in the towing forum.
It has been a sticky there for years.
Ron Gratz explains WD
โAug-31-2022 04:05 PM
โAug-31-2022 03:49 PM
Huntindog wrote:
Try to imagine a tiny scale that would fit between the top of the ball and the coupler. What it would measure is the actual TW.... And that scale would read the same no matter what is done with WD.
โAug-31-2022 03:41 PM
โAug-31-2022 01:49 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
the force the reciever places on the axles change, the force on the axles changes all due to the force from the WD hitch the actual WEIGHT of the trailer tongue does NOT change.
โAug-31-2022 01:45 PM
ktmrfs wrote:valhalla360 wrote:ktmrfs wrote:
saying tongue weight goes down with WDH is like saying I just lost 20 lbs because when I was on the scale and pushed down on the counter the scale dropped by 20 lbs. No your weight stayed the same, you just applied an opposing force in another place and the counter to that force lifted force off the scale. It didn't change your weight at all.
That's all WD bars do. They apply an opposing upward force reducing the load on the rear axle and since the sum of the forces must equal 0 the counter to that force is downward force on the TV and trailer axles
Good analogy but incorrect analysis.
- Your total trailer or body weight stays the same. This goes into the Tow Rating & GCVWR.
- The weight the scale needs to support does go down if you push on the counter. This goes into the Truck Payload & Max Hitch Weight.
the force the reciever places on the axles change, the force on the axles changes all due to the force from the WD hitch the actual WEIGHT of the trailer tongue does NOT change.
โAug-31-2022 01:32 PM
valhalla360 wrote:ktmrfs wrote:
saying tongue weight goes down with WDH is like saying I just lost 20 lbs because when I was on the scale and pushed down on the counter the scale dropped by 20 lbs. No your weight stayed the same, you just applied an opposing force in another place and the counter to that force lifted force off the scale. It didn't change your weight at all.
That's all WD bars do. They apply an opposing upward force reducing the load on the rear axle and since the sum of the forces must equal 0 the counter to that force is downward force on the TV and trailer axles
Good analogy but incorrect analysis.
- Your total trailer or body weight stays the same. This goes into the Tow Rating & GCVWR.
- The weight the scale needs to support does go down if you push on the counter. This goes into the Truck Payload & Max Hitch Weight.
โAug-31-2022 12:39 PM
ktmrfs wrote:
saying tongue weight goes down with WDH is like saying I just lost 20 lbs because when I was on the scale and pushed down on the counter the scale dropped by 20 lbs. No your weight stayed the same, you just applied an opposing force in another place and the counter to that force lifted force off the scale. It didn't change your weight at all.
That's all WD bars do. They apply an opposing upward force reducing the load on the rear axle and since the sum of the forces must equal 0 the counter to that force is downward force on the TV and trailer axles
โAug-31-2022 12:34 PM
Sport45 wrote:
This thread reminds me of a commercial I watched a long time ago showing a small car without rear wheels towing a trailer. The picture below is not from the commercial (itโs from eyershitch.com) but shows a couple of vintage cars configured similarly. Itโs caption indicates the tongue weight. The magic of a WDH!