Jul-08-2015 07:55 AM
Jul-09-2015 05:38 AM
Huntindog wrote:LarryJM wrote:Larry, your hensley is one of the few "integrated" sway control hitches that does not rely on TW for sway control.RinconVTR wrote:Huntindog wrote:
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
You were giving good accurate advice in the first half of this, then it went to h e double L.
One could have the highest rated WDH, and never have any effect on sway, good or bad. The only downside to having too much WDH if ride comfort and possibly un-do stress on a lightweight trailer.
I ran my 4500lb TT with 600lb bars for a couple years, then tried 1k bars. Much improved ride, ironically. Less bounce. Now pulling with a Hensley, I started off with the 1k bars and could not be happier.
In short, the WDH is NOT the issue here, especially if the OP set it up by the book. It anything, add one more washer in the head and give that a try. Otherwise, the last post is about all you have left, shifting weight around, mostly to the front. And make sure there is nothing heavy packed in the back of the trailer.
Also, double check your tires. Worn bias plys tend to round and wear funny allowing more sway than "normal". A nice set of radials may help straighten things out too.
I was fixing to post very close to what you said above when I read Huntindog's comment about the WDH not being the right one for the job since I agree with your statements about what effect is of having too heavy of a WDH for the actual trailer. I too think the real issues are weights and trailer attitude (nose high?) and what is needed now are facts and not WAGS.
Larry
The OP would be best served with the right sized hitch. Too big can actually damage the TT frame in some cases. They make different sizes for a reason.
Jul-09-2015 05:20 AM
westend wrote:not a possibility, like i said, the trailer if 5 hours away (and obviously half the hitch is attached to/in the trailer), and i wont be at it again before my camping trip, which will be followed by an 8 hour drive home, so i am looking for tweaks and changes i can make while camping so i can get it home safely.
I'd suggest to load most of the heavier weight items on the opposite side from the batteries. If I'm understanding it correctly, you moved 280 lbs of batteries off the tongue and to one side of the trailer. That may be contributing to the sway situation.
Jul-09-2015 04:58 AM
not a possibility, like i said, the trailer if 5 hours away (and obviously half the hitch is attached to/in the trailer), and i wont be at it again before my camping trip, which will be followed by an 8 hour drive home, so i am looking for tweaks and changes i can make while camping so i can get it home safely.
Jul-09-2015 04:13 AM
Jul-09-2015 03:16 AM
LarryJM wrote:Larry, your hensley is one of the few "integrated" sway control hitches that does not rely on TW for sway control.RinconVTR wrote:Huntindog wrote:
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
You were giving good accurate advice in the first half of this, then it went to h e double L.
One could have the highest rated WDH, and never have any effect on sway, good or bad. The only downside to having too much WDH if ride comfort and possibly un-do stress on a lightweight trailer.
I ran my 4500lb TT with 600lb bars for a couple years, then tried 1k bars. Much improved ride, ironically. Less bounce. Now pulling with a Hensley, I started off with the 1k bars and could not be happier.
In short, the WDH is NOT the issue here, especially if the OP set it up by the book. It anything, add one more washer in the head and give that a try. Otherwise, the last post is about all you have left, shifting weight around, mostly to the front. And make sure there is nothing heavy packed in the back of the trailer.
Also, double check your tires. Worn bias plys tend to round and wear funny allowing more sway than "normal". A nice set of radials may help straighten things out too.
I was fixing to post very close to what you said above when I read Huntindog's comment about the WDH not being the right one for the job since I agree with your statements about what effect is of having too heavy of a WDH for the actual trailer. I too think the real issues are weights and trailer attitude (nose high?) and what is needed now are facts and not WAGS.
Larry
Jul-09-2015 02:11 AM
RinconVTR wrote:Huntindog wrote:
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
You were giving good accurate advice in the first half of this, then it went to h e double L.
One could have the highest rated WDH, and never have any effect on sway, good or bad. The only downside to having too much WDH if ride comfort and possibly un-do stress on a lightweight trailer.
I ran my 4500lb TT with 600lb bars for a couple years, then tried 1k bars. Much improved ride, ironically. Less bounce. Now pulling with a Hensley, I started off with the 1k bars and could not be happier.
In short, the WDH is NOT the issue here, especially if the OP set it up by the book. It anything, add one more washer in the head and give that a try. Otherwise, the last post is about all you have left, shifting weight around, mostly to the front. And make sure there is nothing heavy packed in the back of the trailer.
Also, double check your tires. Worn bias plys tend to round and wear funny allowing more sway than "normal". A nice set of radials may help straighten things out too.
Jul-08-2015 07:47 PM
Jul-08-2015 07:20 PM
Huntindog wrote:
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
Jul-08-2015 06:40 PM
RedRocket204 wrote:T3rry1 wrote:Huntindog wrote:T3rry1 wrote:
Hey all, I purchased a (used) E2 truunion 10k WD hitch for my trailer, the trailer is relatively small, it's a aerolite cub hybrid, about 20ft closed up, 4000 lbs loaded up...
I installed this hitch by the book, followed all of the instructions, but on a recent trip i was changing lanes during a rainstorm and the trailer swayed quite heavily, it only happened a couple of times during the trip, and i could attribute some of it to rutty roads. The only other thing i could think is lack of tongue weight, would this effect it? i recently moved my batteries inside the trailer for security reasons, and to get 250 lbs off the tongue (4x 6v's, moved to just in front of the axle, under the table bench, vented outside.), but i just wanted to put out a feeler to see if there are any tricks people could suggest to ensure everything is set up as intended.
unfortunately at this moment the trailer is 5 hours from me, so i am just collecting info to try some tweaks next time i am pulling it (in a few weeks)
this is a pic of the wd hitch, just for reference, i dont have any pics of it installed on the trailer.
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
well i understand what you're saying, but honestly, buying a new hitch isn't an option, we're not all moneybags here... hence my post, trying to make due with what i have.
You could always post up locally for a trade to a lighter weight WDH hitch. Certainly won't hurt to try.
Jul-08-2015 06:30 PM
T3rry1 wrote:Huntindog wrote:T3rry1 wrote:
Hey all, I purchased a (used) E2 truunion 10k WD hitch for my trailer, the trailer is relatively small, it's a aerolite cub hybrid, about 20ft closed up, 4000 lbs loaded up...
I installed this hitch by the book, followed all of the instructions, but on a recent trip i was changing lanes during a rainstorm and the trailer swayed quite heavily, it only happened a couple of times during the trip, and i could attribute some of it to rutty roads. The only other thing i could think is lack of tongue weight, would this effect it? i recently moved my batteries inside the trailer for security reasons, and to get 250 lbs off the tongue (4x 6v's, moved to just in front of the axle, under the table bench, vented outside.), but i just wanted to put out a feeler to see if there are any tricks people could suggest to ensure everything is set up as intended.
unfortunately at this moment the trailer is 5 hours from me, so i am just collecting info to try some tweaks next time i am pulling it (in a few weeks)
this is a pic of the wd hitch, just for reference, i dont have any pics of it installed on the trailer.
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
well i understand what you're saying, but honestly, buying a new hitch isn't an option, we're not all moneybags here... hence my post, trying to make due with what i have.
Jul-08-2015 05:59 PM
Huntindog wrote:T3rry1 wrote:
Hey all, I purchased a (used) E2 truunion 10k WD hitch for my trailer, the trailer is relatively small, it's a aerolite cub hybrid, about 20ft closed up, 4000 lbs loaded up...
I installed this hitch by the book, followed all of the instructions, but on a recent trip i was changing lanes during a rainstorm and the trailer swayed quite heavily, it only happened a couple of times during the trip, and i could attribute some of it to rutty roads. The only other thing i could think is lack of tongue weight, would this effect it? i recently moved my batteries inside the trailer for security reasons, and to get 250 lbs off the tongue (4x 6v's, moved to just in front of the axle, under the table bench, vented outside.), but i just wanted to put out a feeler to see if there are any tricks people could suggest to ensure everything is set up as intended.
unfortunately at this moment the trailer is 5 hours from me, so i am just collecting info to try some tweaks next time i am pulling it (in a few weeks)
this is a pic of the wd hitch, just for reference, i dont have any pics of it installed on the trailer.
This style of hitch is what is refferred to as an integrated sway control hitch. There are several of them on the market. Most of them including yours relies on TW for the sway control. The more TW, the more friction, and the more sway control. There are some smaller sized ones said to work with lightewr TW TTs... But yours at 10K isn't one of them. Bigger isn't always better. If you wear size 10 shoes, you will be best served with size 10 shoes... Not size 12s rhat you may grow into someday.
In short your hitch is the wrong tool for the job.
Jul-08-2015 03:50 PM
T3rry1 wrote:
Hey all, I purchased a (used) E2 truunion 10k WD hitch for my trailer, the trailer is relatively small, it's a aerolite cub hybrid, about 20ft closed up, 4000 lbs loaded up...
I installed this hitch by the book, followed all of the instructions, but on a recent trip i was changing lanes during a rainstorm and the trailer swayed quite heavily, it only happened a couple of times during the trip, and i could attribute some of it to rutty roads. The only other thing i could think is lack of tongue weight, would this effect it? i recently moved my batteries inside the trailer for security reasons, and to get 250 lbs off the tongue (4x 6v's, moved to just in front of the axle, under the table bench, vented outside.), but i just wanted to put out a feeler to see if there are any tricks people could suggest to ensure everything is set up as intended.
unfortunately at this moment the trailer is 5 hours from me, so i am just collecting info to try some tweaks next time i am pulling it (in a few weeks)
this is a pic of the wd hitch, just for reference, i dont have any pics of it installed on the trailer.
Jul-08-2015 01:29 PM
Jul-08-2015 01:15 PM
dodge guy wrote:
Are you guessing on the tongue weight? Or do you know for certain. Also what is the exact loaded weight of the trailer?