1SLwLS1
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2013
- Posts
- 220
- Reaction score
- 266
- Ram Year
- 2013
- Engine
- Hemi 6.4
So I bought a tractor last week and have been preparing for transportation over the past few months. I also have a need to haul my Mustang around so that was also in consideration. I didn't want to get a basic 7K GVWR car hauler as I would be pushing the limits of that setup with the 4500# tractor and 4000# Mustang. The 10K GVWR trailers, IMO, are kind of a niche market as there are fewer people with an HD truck that would purchase a trailer so small and most half tons would stick with the 7K trailers. I ended up finding a 14K GVWR 20' trailer that only weighed 2500# (pretty close weight to that of the 7K car haulers) and figured this would be more than enough trailer and if I upgrade to a gooseneck with a 2500 truck down the road, this 14K trailer should be easier to unload.
The truck is a 2013 1500 with BellTech 2/4 and cut brackets with Core upper and lower control arms (installed a month ago) and Spohn panhard bar, stock sway bars, no rear bump stops. I purchased a Weigh Safe Middleweight WDH with the 12,500# spring arms and I am using the Weigh Safe app for all calculations and adjustments. When I first lowered it back in 2021, I had the AirLift 1000 helper bags installed but did not maintain the minimum pressure and ended up ruining them.
With an empty trailer and no spring arms, there is a smidge under 400# tongue weight, looks fairly compressed and rides horribly. I am guessing the 14K springs on the trailer with no load contribute to the very bouncy ride. I recently pulled a small utility trailer loaded with cut pine tress (probably a 4500-5000# total load) with a fixed 2" ball and the ride was smooth as glass, truck didn't know it was back there and much better experience than evening hauling the empty 14K trailer (much less tugging back and forth).
Anyhow, with the tractor and implements loaded and no spring arm, the truck was slammed and had around 900# tongue weight (couldn't really adjust anything on the trailer, the pallet forks and box blade were on the front with the tractor CG fairly centered over the rear trailer axle and couldn't move much in either direction with the cutter hanging off the back. When I added spring arms and cranked up to the calculated distributed tongue weight, there really wasn't much height added back to the rear tire-bed clearance. It was a pretty slow and white-knuckled ride home.
In the future, I probably wouldn't be towing the tractor with all of the implements so the weight would be a bit less and I would have more room fore and aft to better adjust tongue weight but what are my options with this setup to improve? I have heard bags and WDH don't really play well together or if you do use them, air the bags up prior to hitching up and distributing weight. Should I replace the helper bags? Replace the coil springs entirely with the Timbergrove setup? I am not a fan of this option necessarily due to the cost and reliability of a coil spring over the bag, plus I wouldn't know the proper process of adjusting that setup with the replacement bag.
Thoughts? Is my trailer grossly over weight? The sticker shows 14K GVWR and max trailer cargo of 11,600#? Are those often or ever wrong? Seems awfully dangerous and irresponsible for manufacturers to put incorrect information on those stickers.
Gauge picture below is with the unloaded trailer and no spring arms.
The truck is a 2013 1500 with BellTech 2/4 and cut brackets with Core upper and lower control arms (installed a month ago) and Spohn panhard bar, stock sway bars, no rear bump stops. I purchased a Weigh Safe Middleweight WDH with the 12,500# spring arms and I am using the Weigh Safe app for all calculations and adjustments. When I first lowered it back in 2021, I had the AirLift 1000 helper bags installed but did not maintain the minimum pressure and ended up ruining them.
With an empty trailer and no spring arms, there is a smidge under 400# tongue weight, looks fairly compressed and rides horribly. I am guessing the 14K springs on the trailer with no load contribute to the very bouncy ride. I recently pulled a small utility trailer loaded with cut pine tress (probably a 4500-5000# total load) with a fixed 2" ball and the ride was smooth as glass, truck didn't know it was back there and much better experience than evening hauling the empty 14K trailer (much less tugging back and forth).
Anyhow, with the tractor and implements loaded and no spring arm, the truck was slammed and had around 900# tongue weight (couldn't really adjust anything on the trailer, the pallet forks and box blade were on the front with the tractor CG fairly centered over the rear trailer axle and couldn't move much in either direction with the cutter hanging off the back. When I added spring arms and cranked up to the calculated distributed tongue weight, there really wasn't much height added back to the rear tire-bed clearance. It was a pretty slow and white-knuckled ride home.
In the future, I probably wouldn't be towing the tractor with all of the implements so the weight would be a bit less and I would have more room fore and aft to better adjust tongue weight but what are my options with this setup to improve? I have heard bags and WDH don't really play well together or if you do use them, air the bags up prior to hitching up and distributing weight. Should I replace the helper bags? Replace the coil springs entirely with the Timbergrove setup? I am not a fan of this option necessarily due to the cost and reliability of a coil spring over the bag, plus I wouldn't know the proper process of adjusting that setup with the replacement bag.
Thoughts? Is my trailer grossly over weight? The sticker shows 14K GVWR and max trailer cargo of 11,600#? Are those often or ever wrong? Seems awfully dangerous and irresponsible for manufacturers to put incorrect information on those stickers.
Gauge picture below is with the unloaded trailer and no spring arms.