RangerGress
Senior Member
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2014
- Posts
- 106
- Reaction score
- 34
- Location
- Savannah, GA
- Ram Year
- 2014
- Engine
- 3.0l turbo diesel
Don't upgrade the truck brakes. The primary advantage in a big brake kit for a modern car or truck is that it allows the owner to tell his buddies how he has a big brake kit. For all but the most extreme use, modern brakes are fine.
I tow a lot too. I looked up the Equalizer hitch that was mentioned but it look to me like it was primarily anti-sway and not weight distribution. What am I missing?
Re. hooking up your weight distro hitch. In order to do any good your weight distro bars need to be really tight. This means, after truck is hitched to trailer, use the tongue jack to lift the front of the trailer several inches, and then putting some elbow grease into getting the bars really tight. It takes some gumption to get 100lbs on each bar.....and that only moves 200lbs from rear to front which isn't a helova lot.
If you attach the weight distro bars w/o bothering to jack up the tongue a bit, you're unlikely to get the bars tight enough to do any good.
Other trailer issues.
1) Test your trailer brakes before driving off. There should be a button or lever on the brake controller that engages the brakes. Engage the trailer brakes to test that they feel like working that day.
2) Be totally **** about tire pressures. Truck and trailer tires will be under a lot of load. Every day of a trip, check tire pressures.
3) Trailer tires suck. They don't last very long. Get uprated tires if you possible can because they'll be much less stressed and therefore last longer. Always have 2 spare trailer tires.
4) Trailer axles suck. They are weak which allows the geometry of the wheels to get wonky. This creates funny wear patterns and your tires get thrashed in a hurry. Also, when trailer tire camber is off you get a reduced traction patch. This makes the tire lock up easily under braking and the next thing you know you've flat spotted to the cords.
5) Inspect tires and bearings every stop. Just give the tires a quick eyeball and then put your hand on the wheel hub to check for a hot (failing) bearing. Look for tires cording or a bubble in the carcass.
6) On the road, train yourself to keep your eyes and attention well ahead. You will need to predict trouble far more in advance then you've had to before.
7) Be **** about the brake controller's adjustment. Too little and the trailer doesn't help you stop enough. Too much and you flat spot tires. This gets trickier with a cargo trailer because it's weight can vary all over, but less of an issue for a camper.
8) A key to trailer sway it tongue weight. Too little tongue weight will cause sway. This can get spooky if you do the intuitive thing and back off the gas or touch the brakes. That's how trailers wreck tow vehicles. If your trailer starts swaying, stay on the gas and touch the controller's trailer brake lever.
9) Every time something big and faster goes by, prepare for it to first push you away and then suck you in. The gentle countersteering you need to do will become automatic after a while.
10) On dual axle trailers, if you lose a tire, you almost certainly will not feel it. The most you can hope for is that you might catch a piece of rubber flying off in your mirror, or a passerby will alert you to the problem. Once one tire goes, the other will quickly follow. When you do get home with your spare installed, replace not only the flat, but it's overloaded buddy that took all the strain when the flat fell apart. Usually Murphy ensures that the tire that goes is the one on the right so passersby don't see it and therefore you get no warning. A good solution can be a TPMS system, but if you find an aftermarket one that is reliable, pls tell me so I can buy what you found. Mine sucks.
I tow a lot too. I looked up the Equalizer hitch that was mentioned but it look to me like it was primarily anti-sway and not weight distribution. What am I missing?
Re. hooking up your weight distro hitch. In order to do any good your weight distro bars need to be really tight. This means, after truck is hitched to trailer, use the tongue jack to lift the front of the trailer several inches, and then putting some elbow grease into getting the bars really tight. It takes some gumption to get 100lbs on each bar.....and that only moves 200lbs from rear to front which isn't a helova lot.
If you attach the weight distro bars w/o bothering to jack up the tongue a bit, you're unlikely to get the bars tight enough to do any good.
Other trailer issues.
1) Test your trailer brakes before driving off. There should be a button or lever on the brake controller that engages the brakes. Engage the trailer brakes to test that they feel like working that day.
2) Be totally **** about tire pressures. Truck and trailer tires will be under a lot of load. Every day of a trip, check tire pressures.
3) Trailer tires suck. They don't last very long. Get uprated tires if you possible can because they'll be much less stressed and therefore last longer. Always have 2 spare trailer tires.
4) Trailer axles suck. They are weak which allows the geometry of the wheels to get wonky. This creates funny wear patterns and your tires get thrashed in a hurry. Also, when trailer tire camber is off you get a reduced traction patch. This makes the tire lock up easily under braking and the next thing you know you've flat spotted to the cords.
5) Inspect tires and bearings every stop. Just give the tires a quick eyeball and then put your hand on the wheel hub to check for a hot (failing) bearing. Look for tires cording or a bubble in the carcass.
6) On the road, train yourself to keep your eyes and attention well ahead. You will need to predict trouble far more in advance then you've had to before.
7) Be **** about the brake controller's adjustment. Too little and the trailer doesn't help you stop enough. Too much and you flat spot tires. This gets trickier with a cargo trailer because it's weight can vary all over, but less of an issue for a camper.
8) A key to trailer sway it tongue weight. Too little tongue weight will cause sway. This can get spooky if you do the intuitive thing and back off the gas or touch the brakes. That's how trailers wreck tow vehicles. If your trailer starts swaying, stay on the gas and touch the controller's trailer brake lever.
9) Every time something big and faster goes by, prepare for it to first push you away and then suck you in. The gentle countersteering you need to do will become automatic after a while.
10) On dual axle trailers, if you lose a tire, you almost certainly will not feel it. The most you can hope for is that you might catch a piece of rubber flying off in your mirror, or a passerby will alert you to the problem. Once one tire goes, the other will quickly follow. When you do get home with your spare installed, replace not only the flat, but it's overloaded buddy that took all the strain when the flat fell apart. Usually Murphy ensures that the tire that goes is the one on the right so passersby don't see it and therefore you get no warning. A good solution can be a TPMS system, but if you find an aftermarket one that is reliable, pls tell me so I can buy what you found. Mine sucks.