BrianWalker
TDR MEMBER
My brother wants a new Gearbox toy hauler, 26' front sleeper.
Dry wt. = 6464#, Dry hitch wt. = 1174#. (from brochure)
This is 18% of trailer wt.
Rule is 10-15% from what I've seen.
Say he loads it to its max capacity of 11,400# and in a perfect world, it's perfectly balanced.
Does this mean his TW is now 18% of 11,400# or 2,052#, right?
No hitch is rated this high.
But if you add Weight Distribution, from what I've seen in posts, approx 80% is transferred to the truck, 1640#.
This leaves 410#, of which 10-20% is transferred to the trailer.
400# is not heavy at all for a 3500 with a class 4.
The problem I'm still having is that the hitch/reciever, ball/WD system is still controlling 2,052#.
The biggest Putnam is rated for 14,000#/1400#.
Am I nuts? Is the Putnam or anything else not enough?
Brian
Dry wt. = 6464#, Dry hitch wt. = 1174#. (from brochure)
This is 18% of trailer wt.
Rule is 10-15% from what I've seen.
Say he loads it to its max capacity of 11,400# and in a perfect world, it's perfectly balanced.
Does this mean his TW is now 18% of 11,400# or 2,052#, right?
No hitch is rated this high.
But if you add Weight Distribution, from what I've seen in posts, approx 80% is transferred to the truck, 1640#.
This leaves 410#, of which 10-20% is transferred to the trailer.
400# is not heavy at all for a 3500 with a class 4.
The problem I'm still having is that the hitch/reciever, ball/WD system is still controlling 2,052#.
The biggest Putnam is rated for 14,000#/1400#.
Am I nuts? Is the Putnam or anything else not enough?
Brian