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Pintle or Ball??

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Cleaning Trailer's EDPM Roof

first big tow with hx-40

I'm picking up a used 16' 10,000# drop deck trailer this weekend. I got it for a good price. It's got a pintle and two of the guys at work say that I should change it right over to the 2 5/16" mount. I've yanked pintle trailers before and have had no problems. Anyone have any problems or have a preference???
 
CUMAPART,



I have towed heavier pintles with dump trucks but nothing lighter. Only advantage I can think of is being able to grease the ball. You can get pintle hooks to plug right into your receiver. There is even one that works both ways.
 
Yeah, I can see the advantage because nnot too many of my frieneds can borrow a pintle. UNLESS, they borrow my hitch and the trailer (':rolleyes:')
 
My 16 foot, 14,500lb equipment trailer came with a pintle hook. I changed to a 2 5/16 ball for two reasons. One, I tow this trailer with my tractor on it on really bumpy dirt roads and the pintle hook banged around a lot. I was afraid it would eventually cause cracks in my truck frame. Second, with a 2 5/16 ball I could use a equilizer hitch which makes the towing a lot smoother. If I was towing it behind a dump truck I would leave on the pintle.
 
Most people use pintle hitches because of their weight carrying capacity, when properly mounted they can handle huge amounts of weight. When you mount the pintle on a regular reciever adapter, as I do, it drops the towing capacity down to normal hitch levels. Not to mention pintle hitches run around $100 without the receiver adapter. I usually have mine on there for looks right now. BTW, the ring on the trailer is called a lunette.
 
I had also been told that most construction trailers are pintle because they are a closed hitch— when latched they did not depend on a compression pressure like a ball mount to keep them hitched. This means they won't pop when loading heavy equipment onto the trailer which might make it seesaw severly. Truth, or myth??? :confused:
 
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