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Hitch Your Trailer: How
Trailer Length Affects Towing Stability
by Jeremy Johnson |
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Imagine this scene: you and your
family are out enjoying your brand
new travel trailer. Not only is your
trailer new, but so is your shiny
new towing vehicle. Let's say that's
a heavy duty diesel pickup truck,
and it's an extended, four-door cab
that has plenty of room for your
wife and your kids.
This really a big part of the
traditional American Dream isn't it?
Quality family time with a
recreational vehicle, getting away
from civilization, but doing it in
the comfort of a brand new travel
trailer. I don't think it could get
much better.
There's only one problem. It's a
windy day. When you were picking up
your new travel trailer at the
dealership the other day it never
occurred to you just how scary it
could be to tow your nice long
trailer down the highway in a
serious cross wind.
Dealing with the wind is a fact of
life if you're going to be any kind
of RV enthusiast, so make sure you
understand how to tow safely in it.
It really all comes down to the
length of your trailer relative to
the length of the vehicle you're
using to tow it with. Think of it
this way - it's all about leverage.
If your trailer is long relative to
the wheelbase of the vehicle you're
using to tow the trailer, you could
be in for an interesting vacation.
A travel trailer has a broad profile
in the wind, so if mother nature is
blowing hard, or if you're getting
passed by tractor trailers at high
speeds, your trailer basically acts
as a sail. It's not unlike carrying
a piece of four foot by eight foot
plywood.
If you've ever had that experience
you know what I'm talking about. The
plywood acts like a sail and it can
drag you all over the place if you
don't know how to handle it.
The same way it takes strength to
handle that plywood in the wind, it
takes a long wheelbase on your tow
vehicle to handle the tug of a
relatively long travel trailer. If
you've got a twenty-three foot boxy
trailer and you're pulling it with a
small SUV, chances are you're going
to get jerked around quite a bit.
But, that same small SUV would have
no problem at all with a small
folding tent trailer. It's all
relative.
As a general guideline I'd suggest
that you could pull a trailer
approximately twenty feet long as
long as your vehicle has a wheelbase
of at least 110 inches. So that's
about nine feet of wheelbase to
handle twenty feet of trailer.
If you want to get a longer trailer,
I'd recommend that you have at least
four inches of wheelbase for each
additional foot of trailer length.
That way you're always making sure
to keep the ratio of trailer length
to wheelbase high enough.
One last thought is you should not
only consider the total length of
the trailer, but also the distance
from the coupler (or tongue) to the
axle of the trailer. There will be a
big difference in stability for a
trailer where that coupler to tongue
distance is really short, compared
to one where it's really long.
Article Source:
ArticlesBase.com
About
the Author:
Jeremy Johnson
teaches people about
hitch covers
and also advises
them on the right
way to set up a
trailer hitch.
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