![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "GM" wrote in message ... On Feb 23, 5:57 am, "Morgans" wrote: "HL Falbaum" wrote Sway is more a function of the tow vehicle than anything else. Demonstrated by towing same trailer, same road, same day, same speed--two different vehicles, vastly different result. If you don't believe that, try towing ANY trailer with an uber short wheelbase, low overhang vehicle, like a Jeep. A Jeep CJ vehicle will make ANY trailer sway, with any trailer weight and balance. -- Jim in NC That may be true for the CJ but I owned a 2-door Dodge 'Raider' aka Mitsubishi 'Pajero'. This car had about the same dimensions as the CJ but I towed my trailer from PA to CA and back without any sway whatsoever. Good trailer tires and a good weight distribution in the trailer plus the proper tounge weight are the key to happy trailering. Uli Not to belabor the point, but the two vehicles in my experiment were similar size, weight, overhang. The real difference was suspension stiffness. A soft '98 Chevrolet Tahoe, and a (about same year) Ford Expedition. The Ford had a stiffer suspension and more precise steering. The Chev was soft and more "loose", the sway always started at about 70mph. The Tahoe was replaced with a '03 Avalanche---stiffer suspension, tighter steering. Same trailer was then towed without sway at any speed. Hartley Falbaum "KF" USA |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK, so a proper fit between the hitch and ball is important, too.
What do I do with my Cobra trailer that fits a 50mm ball? I actually *do* have a 50mm ball but it has a 1" shank. However, my car has a 1.25" hitch receiver (factory installed), and I can't find any fittings that will take a 1" shank. For the moment I'm just using a 1 7/8" ball (47.6mm) since the trailer just goes from the tiedown to the end of the runway, and I've heard the horror stories of using a 2" ball (50.8mm). Any ideas that don't cost an arm and a leg (such as "buy a new car")? -- Matt |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Matt;
It is a good idea to have options. So, if someone else has to come get you with their car, they are likely to have a 1 7/8" or a 2" ball. It would be easy to replace the hitch on the trailer with either a 2" or 1 7/8" . These are commonly available, just bolt on. Then sell the 50mm ball. For little money, a welding shop could make a custom mount---50mm ball with 1" shank into 2"x 1/4"x 1/4" square tube, welded onto 1 1/4 " tubing stub and insert into your receiver. 50mm hitch on 1 7/8" ball is just a little sloppy--probably a minor factor, but best to change something. -- Hartley Falbaum "mattm" wrote in message ... OK, so a proper fit between the hitch and ball is important, too. What do I do with my Cobra trailer that fits a 50mm ball? I actually *do* have a 50mm ball but it has a 1" shank. However, my car has a 1.25" hitch receiver (factory installed), and I can't find any fittings that will take a 1" shank. For the moment I'm just using a 1 7/8" ball (47.6mm) since the trailer just goes from the tiedown to the end of the runway, and I've heard the horror stories of using a 2" ball (50.8mm). Any ideas that don't cost an arm and a leg (such as "buy a new car")? -- Matt |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "HL Falbaum" wrote Not to belabor the point, but the two vehicles in my experiment were similar size, weight, overhang. The real difference was suspension stiffness. A soft '98 Chevrolet Tahoe, and a (about same year) Ford Expedition. The Ford had a stiffer suspension and more precise steering. The Chev was soft and more "loose", the sway always started at about 70mph. The Tahoe was replaced with a '03 Avalanche---stiffer suspension, tighter steering. Same trailer was then towed without sway at any speed. Interesting. In my case, a Chevy Citation vs a CJ, and the CJ certainly had the stiffer suspension, and it was worse. I think the tighness of the steering may be playing a bigger factor than we are giving it credit for. -- Jim in NC |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "HL Falbaum" wrote It is a good idea to have options. So, if someone else has to come get you with their car, they are likely to have a 1 7/8" or a 2" ball. It would be easy to replace the hitch on the trailer with either a 2" or 1 7/8" . These are commonly available, just bolt on. Then sell the 50mm ball. For little money, a welding shop could make a custom mount---50mm ball with 1" shank into 2"x 1/4"x 1/4" square tube, welded onto 1 1/4 " tubing stub and insert into your receiver. 50mm hitch on 1 7/8" ball is just a little sloppy--probably a minor factor, but best to change something. I agree. Get a welding shop (if you are not able to do it yourself) to change out the trailer hitch for a standard size like 2". (standard in this area, anyway) Also, custom fit the 1 1/4" stub to your receiver. I have usually found they fit loose as crap, unless you do something to make it fit right. I had good luck doing this by running two beads of weld down the length of the hitch stub on two adjacent sides of the stub, then grind it down to a "just right - slide in, but no wobble" fit. It is amazing how that can reduce sway, and quiet down the ride down the road. Anyone else with a sway problem have a sloppy fitting hitch - receiver fit? Anyone do something to tighten up the fit? -- Jim in NC |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 25, 12:03*am, "Morgans" wrote:
"HL Falbaum" wrote It is a good idea to have options. So, if someone else has to come get you with their car, they are likely to have a 1 7/8" or a 2" ball. It would be easy to replace the hitch on the trailer with either a 2" or 1 7/8" . These are commonly available, just bolt on. Then sell the 50mm ball. For little money, a welding shop could make a custom mount---50mm ball with 1" shank into 2"x 1/4"x 1/4" square tube, welded onto 1 1/4 " tubing stub and insert into your receiver. 50mm hitch on 1 7/8" ball is just a little sloppy--probably a minor factor, but best to change something. *I agree. *Get a welding shop (if you are not able to do it yourself) to change out the trailer hitch for a standard size like 2". *(standard in this area, anyway) *Also, custom fit the 1 1/4" stub to your receiver. *I have usually found they fit loose as crap, unless you do something to make it fit right. I had good luck doing this by running two beads of weld down the length of the hitch stub on two adjacent sides of the stub, then grind it down to a "just right - slide in, but no wobble" fit. *It is amazing how that can reduce sway, and quiet down the ride down the road. Anyone else with a sway problem have a sloppy fitting hitch - receiver fit? Anyone do something to tighten up the fit? -- Jim in NC Ok there seems to be a lot of OWT, and other imprecise anecdotal evidence about trailers and towing floating out there. Has anyone like an AKAFLIEG group ever done some trailer dynamocs studies???? Peter |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I had good luck doing this by running two beads of weld down the length of the hitch stub on two adjacent sides of the stub, then grind it down to a "just right - slide in, but no wobble" fit. *It is amazing how that can reduce sway, and quiet down the ride down the road. Anyone else with a sway problem have a sloppy fitting hitch - receiver fit? Anyone do something to tighten up the fit? Yes, get an "anti-rattle" J bolt device for your receiver for about $23. from Redtrailers.com See it at http://www.redtrailers.com/ShowItem.asp?id=63201 You may need a shop to drill an extra hole in the side of your steel hitch. Includes a lock device. A fellow Texas glider pilot suggested it. It tightens up nicely and stops the rattling. This must help with sway -- but I really don't have much sway because I don't drive my glider trailers (5) over 60 MPH. Burt "The Turtle", just easin' on down the road from Marfa, in southwest Texas, USA |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Morgans" wrote in message ... "HL Falbaum" wrote It is a good idea to have options. So, if someone else has to come get you with their car, they are likely to have a 1 7/8" or a 2" ball. I agree. Get a welding shop (if you are not able to do it yourself) to change out the trailer hitch for a standard size like 2". (standard in this area, anyway) Also, custom fit the 1 1/4" stub to your receiver. I have usually found they fit loose as crap, unless you do something to make it fit right. I had good luck doing this by running two beads of weld down the length of the hitch stub on two adjacent sides of the stub, then grind it down to a "just right - slide in, but no wobble" fit. It is amazing how that can reduce sway, and quiet down the ride down the road. Anyone else with a sway problem have a sloppy fitting hitch - receiver fit? Anyone do something to tighten up the fit? -- Jim in NC At the suggestion of someone else, I drove large nails into the gap between stub and receiver, to remove the "slop". Made absolutely no difference with sway in the Tahoe. As to driving slowly, I had to do that with the Tahoe. Sway started anyway when I was passed by 75mph Semis. Hartley Falbaum |
#29
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Burt Compton - Marfa" wrote Yes, get an "anti-rattle" J bolt device for your receiver for about $23. from Redtrailers.com I had not seen that product, but my method is cheaper, and faster! ;-) I change hitches frequently, (different height trailer hitches required) so quick no fuss solutions are valuable to me. -- Jim in NC |
#30
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim,
You asked if "anyone do something to tighten up the fit?" so I offered readers the off-the-shelf J-Bolt idea as an additional method. I have 5 glider trailers and several other equipment trailers. I use a variable hitch ball unit that I can quickly move up or down with a "quickie" pin. The anti-rattle J-bolt stays in place underneath in the main 2" receiver. Your Do It Yourself welding method works as well. Indeed, it is brilliant! Hartley's nails in the receiver idea didn't sound so appealing if they worked loose and fell on the road, but it's yet another good and fast DIY idea! Burt Marfa Gliders Soaring Center, west Texas USA PS A student of mine decided to "air up" all my pneumatic tires on my aircraft, trailers, bikes, cars, hand-trucks, O2 carts, etc. We lost count after 110 as we were laughing so hard about the amazing number. Thank goodness for "slime"! |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Trailer tires for old (1981) Komet Trailer | [email protected] | Soaring | 3 | May 13th 09 10:24 PM |
Old Komet Trailer | thermalrider | Soaring | 7 | October 11th 08 04:13 PM |
Komet Trailer Gas Springs | P. Corbett | Soaring | 4 | March 11th 07 11:30 PM |
Komet Trailer Rims | Tim Hanke | Soaring | 6 | February 28th 06 04:56 PM |
Komet trailer strut | John Shelton | Soaring | 5 | November 15th 03 05:04 PM |