โJul-07-2018 12:41 PM
โJul-21-2018 03:59 PM
beemerphile1 wrote:BarneyS wrote:
Great picture but do you know for a fact what happened to the frame?
It has a WDH. Was it too heavy rated for the TT?
Was the TT damaged in a previous accident?
Was it simply defective?
A number of Weekend Warriors were recalled due to the wrong gauge steel used for the tongue. The result was them slowly bending over time.
A trailer on a ball without a WDH will not be overly stressed by a heavier duty truck.
A picture without mucho information means nothing.
โJul-18-2018 05:42 PM
BarneyS wrote:
โJul-18-2018 03:52 PM
โJul-18-2018 10:41 AM
BarneyS wrote:
โJul-17-2018 09:30 AM
BarneyS wrote:Jay Coe wrote:Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.
Hogwash. The entire trailer frame is simply going to rock on it's own springs. It isn't going to flex/stress or damage the A frame.
โJul-17-2018 08:28 AM
Jay Coe wrote:Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.
Hogwash. The entire trailer frame is simply going to rock on it's own springs. It isn't going to flex/stress or damage the A frame.
โJul-16-2018 08:48 PM
98coachman wrote:
Look what you started nobby.:B
โJul-16-2018 07:24 PM
Jay Coe wrote:Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.
Hogwash. The entire trailer frame is simply going to rock on it's own springs. It isn't going to flex/stress or damage the A frame.
โJul-16-2018 08:21 AM
Jay Coe wrote:Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.
Hogwash. The entire trailer frame is simply going to rock on it's own springs. It isn't going to flex/stress or damage the A frame.
โJul-16-2018 07:18 AM
98coachman wrote:
Look what you started nobby.:B
โJul-16-2018 06:38 AM
Bryan wrote:
I had one trailer damage the front siding where the A-frame flexed. I had another trailer where the A-frame failed completely. A stiffer truck is absolutely harder on the part of the trailer chassis susceptible to the highest forces. I remember my Jayco voided the warranty if it was towed with a truck heavier than a 1-ton.
โJul-15-2018 10:00 PM
โJul-15-2018 09:55 PM
Jay Coe wrote:Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.
Hogwash. The entire trailer frame is simply going to rock on it's own springs. It isn't going to flex/stress or damage the A frame.
โJul-15-2018 09:30 PM
Hannibal wrote:
On a buckboard conrete interstate, you seriously can't tell the difference in ride between an F550 and your F150? You can't understand that the harsh ride of the F550 gets transmitted to the tongue of the trailer? We can't always predict the road's surface nor can we creep down the interstate to ease over rough concrete expansion joints or dips in the road. If that ball that the travel trailer is hooked to is jerking up and down with the stiff suspension of the F550, the A frame is going to flex as it absorbs the shock and will eventually fail.