Oct-04-2013 01:12 PM
Oct-07-2013 06:39 AM
fickman wrote:
This is exactly what it is happening. As I said, in 1,800 miles, it only happened a handful of times after a quick steering maneuver e.g. to avoid tire debris in the road, for no more than 5 seconds each time. I also didn't mean to portray the hopping as extreme. . . it's inches, not feet. It was not felt in the van, but I saw it. Otherwise, the camper tracks very well behind the van. The camper did not move due to extreme West Texas winds or when being passed by big rigs, either.
Oct-06-2013 10:06 PM
p220sigman wrote:
It is hard to tell from your picture, but it also looks like your tongue is high so the Pup angles up to the TV. You may also need to look at a drawbar with a drop to it so that the Pup is level or slightly lower at the tongue.
RinconVTR wrote:
#1 ***Get the camper weighed on a scale!
#2. THEN verify #270lbs on the tongue is 10% or more of that scale weight.
- You may very well need a little more weight on the tongue, but dont go crazy.
- Trailer nose angle can greatly help reduce sway and trailer control on single axle trailer. (should be level or slightly nose down)
- What PSI are you running in your trailer tires? If not max cold, try it.
- Is this an older camper? Have you had a shop look at tire/axle alignment?
popupcamping wrote:
All you are seeing is the trailer naturally trying to get back on track, No biggie.
Oct-06-2013 07:07 PM
Oct-06-2013 07:06 PM
Oct-06-2013 06:22 PM
Oct-05-2013 08:49 AM
Road Ruler wrote:
You are driving a dangerous combination and the sway issue needs to be fixed ASAP.
Suggest getting your rig to a towing specialist for analysis and resolution. Also 65MPH is too fast when towing a trailer.
fickman wrote:
Thanks for taking time to respond. I think that seems a little alarmist, but your concern is noted.
I'm at about 1/3 of my max tow rating and less than that of my payload. My van could stop this camper on a dime without the trailer brakes - and yet, the trailer does have brakes and I use a Prodigy controller. I don't think there's anything inherently dangerous about my setup as a whole.
Ya'll have convinced me to continue to investigate this phenomenon and look for a solution. That's the whole reason I started this thread.
I appreciate all of the feedback thus far! Thanks!
Oct-05-2013 08:22 AM
Oct-05-2013 07:55 AM
Oct-05-2013 04:52 AM
Oct-04-2013 06:15 PM
SDcampowneroperator wrote:GWolfe wrote:
If your pup weighs 2700 lbs you should have a tongue weight of at least 270 lbs, you shouldn't be able to pick it up easily. My 8' pup had a tongue weight of around 200lbs before I added the extension, I have never had a problem with sway.
You need to get more weight up front a WDH is not going to help with a light tongue weight.
Good advice. Tongue weight should be at least 10% of total trailer weight on a ball towable to minimize tail wag.
You said you can pick up the tongue easily. Unless you are an incredibly strong man, I suspect you do not have enough weight forward. Use your bathroom scale under the tongue jack to determine the %.
Oct-04-2013 05:28 PM
GWolfe wrote:
If your pup weighs 2700 lbs you should have a tongue weight of at least 270 lbs, you shouldn't be able to pick it up easily. My 8' pup had a tongue weight of around 200lbs before I added the extension, I have never had a problem with sway.
You need to get more weight up front a WDH is not going to help with a light tongue weight.
Oct-04-2013 05:17 PM
GWolfe wrote:
If your pup weighs 2700 lbs you should have a tongue weight of at least 270 lbs, you shouldn't be able to pick it up easily. My 8' pup had a tongue weight of around 200lbs before I added the extension, I have never had a problem with sway.
You need to get more weight up front a WDH is not going to help with a light tongue weight.
Oct-04-2013 05:09 PM
Oct-04-2013 04:58 PM
rrupert wrote:
I worked for a Coleman dealer and he advised customers that had models with the front storage trunk like yours to keep the trunk weighted with your heaviest items. They tend to be tail heavy and must have added forward weight. Also, make sure your tires are kept at the maximum recommended pressure.
Road Ruler wrote:
You are driving a dangerous combination and the sway issue needs to be fixed ASAP.
Suggest getting your rig to a towing specialist for analysis and resolution. Also 65MPH is too fast when towing a trailer.