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#1
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I have been told that crossing your trailer safety chains is the right thing to do. Something about if the coupler comes off the ball, the trailer will be limited in its wayward travel. Sounds like something for Mythbusters to figure out. Yes or no, what say you?
And while you are at it, anyone have a great crazy "trailer came off the ball" story to share? You first. - John |
#2
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This site says that the crossed chains will "catch" the hitch. I didn't know that.
http://auto.howstuffworks.com/auto-p...ty-cables1.htm And it might even be against the law not to cross chains in some states! Yikes! Who knew? http://forums.iboats.com/trailers-to...ns-421062.html And a video to watch. Always nice to while away the time. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsw0-q4oo_4 |
#3
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I was in a rush to get to the airport on a good day. Hooked the trailer up at the barn where it lives (up the hill from the airport) and drove off. First bump I hit, I heard the coupler disengage. I had in fact crossed the chains, and they worked as advertised in your link. The trailer tongue was hung up in the "basket", and it swung gently fore and aft with very little side-to-side motion. The automatic brake cable also worked. I was left with a small dent in the mini-van bumper and a slightly elevated heart rate. The guy who taught me to tow trailers was a WW2 truck driver who claimed that crossing the chains was "critical". I don't know that my outcome would have been much worse if the chains hadn't been crossed, but it sure seemed to work well when I inadvertently tested out the theory .
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#4
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On 5/2/2014 6:21 PM, JohnDeRosa wrote:
And while you are at it, anyone have a great crazy "trailer came off the ball" story to share? You first. Well yes I do, but fortunately not a "glider trailer came off the ball" story. I was driving a truck pulling a heavy compressor trailer down a city street when I casually looked to the right and saw a familiar trailer trying to pass me! There was nothing I could do but drive next to it so my truck would at least limit it's excursions to the left. The thing finally slowed down by itself and followed the slant in the road toward the curb. When it finally grazed the curb, it slowed down and finally perfectly parked itself! I hooked it up (properly this time) and drove off as if nothing had happened. (Except for my knees knocking.) Nobody but me saw it, and I didn't tell, so I got to keep my job. Motto: Always "preflight" your trailer before driving off. |
#5
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This was over 30 years ago. I was towing a trailer behind a school
bus. The bus had been in an accident and the catch for the trailer hitch was not catching. This was one of those hitches that you put on the ball and then screw down from the top to tighten to the ball. At one point I looked up in the mirror to see the trailer flipping over in the air. The trailer had come off the hitch, the hitch had dug into the asphalt and the road and had flipped up and did a front back 360. It landed in the ditch. It landed uprigt.This being Minnesota in the Winter the ditch was full of snow. It appeared OK so we went to the nearby farmer and borrowed a set of chains to pull it out of the ditch. The trailer was fine. We reattached to the bus and continued on our way, stopping every 5 miles to make sure the hitch was still attached firmly. I do not know if the chains were crossed or if the chains were just to long and did not cradle the hitch when it came off. I do recall the chains were broken. On Fri, 2 May 2014 15:21:47 -0700 (PDT), JohnDeRosa wrote: I have been told that crossing your trailer safety chains is the right thing to do. Something about if the coupler comes off the ball, the trailer will be limited in its wayward travel. Sounds like something for Mythbusters to figure out. Yes or no, what say you? And while you are at it, anyone have a great crazy "trailer came off the ball" story to share? You first. - John --- This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. http://www.avast.com |
#6
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On 5/2/2014 4:21 PM, JohnDeRosa wrote:
I have been told that crossing your trailer safety chains is the right thing to do. Something about if the coupler comes off the ball, the trailer will be limited in its wayward travel. Sounds like something for Mythbusters to figure out. Yes or no, what say you? And while you are at it, anyone have a great crazy "trailer came off the ball" story to share? You first. - John Way back when - when I first began towing trailers - someone (my old man?) told me to cross the chains, and why (to minimize the chances of "pole vaulting")...it made sense to me, so - chains permitting - I've always crossed 'em. Happily, I've never tested the reasoning. That said, once when retrieving someone - their vehicle pulling a factory PIK-20 trailer - less than two miles from the airport & still in town, someone pulled up beside me waving frantically and pointing behind me. I pulled over to figure out why. When I pre-flighted the (ready to go [almost!]) trailer, I missed catching the fact the rear door wasn't latched. It'd flopped open and was skating raucously on the metal brackets that support the door when the fuselage rests on it for rigging. Hadn't heard a thing in the cushy 5 Series BMW! I'd'a 'fessed up if asked...but I wasn't asked. That's prolly in my top 3 bozo trailer moves...for #1, it'll take more than RAS to pull it outta me. (It wasn't a glider trailer but...kids, LISTEN to those little voices in your heads!) Bob - a decade later & it still gives me the shakes - W. |
#7
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At 04:14 03 May 2014, BobW wrote:
That said, once when retrieving someone - their vehicle pulling a factory PIK-20 trailer - less than two miles from the airport & still in town, someone pulled up beside me waving frantically and pointing behind me. I pulled over to figure out why. When I pre-flighted the (ready to go [almost!]) trailer, I missed catching the fact the rear door wasn't latched. It'd flopped open and was skating raucously on the metal brackets that support the door when the fuselage rests on it for rigging. Car and trailer pulled away from traffic lights only to have someone come up alongside gesticulating wildly. The trailer door was open and the Dart fuselage was lying on it's side back at the lights.... |
#8
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At 08:48 03 May 2014, Z Goudie wrote:
At 04:14 03 May 2014, BobW wrote: That said, once when retrieving someone - their vehicle pulling a factory PIK-20 trailer - less than two miles from the airport & still in town, someone pulled up beside me waving frantically and pointing behind me. I pulled over to figure out why. When I pre-flighted the (ready to go [almost!]) trailer, I missed catching the fact the rear door wasn't latched. It'd flopped open and was skating raucously on the metal brackets that support the door when the fuselage rests on it for rigging. Car and trailer pulled away from traffic lights only to have someone come up alongside gesticulating wildly. The trailer door was open and the Dart fuselage was lying on it's side back at the lights.... Brennig James on the North Circular (London) in the late 1960's. I sort of witnessed a similar event on my first ever arrival at Nypsfield in 1974. I was driving up the hill from Stroud, with my K6e trailer on the back, when, near the top of the hill, I saw a Kestrel fusilage leaning against the grass bank by the side of the road. Comp number 29, my friend John Glossop. I assumed he had arrived a day early for the competition and landed out on a practice flight. A couple of minutes later I drove in the airfield gate and saw a trailer in front of me, doors open, no fusilage inside and John Glossop and a Nypsfield club member (who had noticed the problem when John stopped to ask directions for parking) walking towards the back of the trailer. John had apparently thought that the other guy was pulling his leg, when he gopt to the back of the trailer and found it open and no fusilage, the expression on his face was one I remeber to this day. The only damage was a nbroken rudder and Slingsbys got a new one to him next morning, he was only a bit late launching on the task. |
#9
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Cross chains... okay. This tidbit should replace one of those un-useful questions on the written test for aspiring glider pilots.
I've added it to my list '1000 and 1 important facts that you should hope to stumble upon before you need them'. As to premature termination of trailering, there is sure to be a guy out there who puts a 50 mm ball on his truck and then one day rents a U-haul trailer with a worn hitch. Here's hoping that he gets the word about crossing chains. |
#10
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On Saturday, May 3, 2014 7:03:01 AM UTC-6, son_of_flubber wrote:
Cross chains... okay. This tidbit should replace one of those un-useful questions on the written test for aspiring glider pilots. I've added it to my list '1000 and 1 important facts that you should hope to stumble upon before you need them'. As to premature termination of trailering, there is sure to be a guy out there who puts a 50 mm ball on his truck and then one day rents a U-haul trailer with a worn hitch. Here's hoping that he gets the word about crossing chains. Story (true) A volunteer picked up a new club glider in a distant city. The trailer hitch seemed loose on the ball - but what the heck, the other club members wanted to see their new glider so haste was the order of the day. When the glider and trailer miraculously arrived intact, it was found the tow truck had a 1 7/8" ball and the trailer had a 2" hitch which was now severely damaged. The trailer tower said he didn't know trailer balls came in different sizes and he thought the banging noises were "normal". The safety chains had made the trip neatly wrapped around the tow bar where they were "out of the way". |
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