Home > Maintenance & Mods (L322) > Adjustable Tow Bar ? |
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miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
I'd be careful using box section for the hitch, the original is solid bar, if you wanted to use box section you'd have to put an incert in it where the pin goes through to spread the load Yesterday I couldn't spell Engineer... Today I are one!
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13th Jan 2016 1:27am |
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Zirconblue Member Since: 16 Apr 2015 Location: Kent Posts: 1277 |
With mine in the middle pair of holes it's spot on for the recommended height for my 2006 ifor williams, it does sit slightly nose down, but it's supposed to do this to improve stability (according to Ifor Williams). It's obviously much more nose down when empty because there's no weight to compress the trailer suspension. My little Erde box trailer looks stupid when empty, but levels out to a much more sensible attitude when loaded. (the middle holes are the same height as the swan neck) It's not really a 'regulation', it's simply an agreed standard, so in theory car manufacturers and trailer manufacturers will all make their hitches to the same height. If you have an older trailer then there was no real standard height, so it could be anything. If i recall when looking up the spec before, the specified height still has a fairly wide range, and the standard range rover hitch is towards the bottom of the range, top hole on the hitch is towards the middle. The following links say it should be between 350 and 420mm, so thats about 13-16 inches. With the trailer hitch slightly higher (so it's nose down when coupled) http://caravanchronicles.com/guides/unders...ll-height/ http://www.pfjones.co.uk/towball-heights.html One thing to note with spacer blocks and adjustable hitches is they should be type approved - there aren't many adjustable drop plates that are. Type approval was brought in to stop people making up home brew tow hitches from bits of scrap and welding them to inappropriate bits of the car, i mean just look at the rubbish homebrew trailers you see people doing tip runs with! In practice the non-type approved ones should be fine, but if you should be involved in an accident, your insurer might use it as an excuse to avoid paying out. |
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13th Jan 2016 12:23pm |
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miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
Sorry to burst your bubble but you are incorrect,
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14th Jan 2016 12:18pm |
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miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
It doesn't matter what height the hitch is if your only towing a single axle trailer, it makes absolutely no difference to the way that the trailer tows.
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14th Jan 2016 1:07pm |
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Zirconblue Member Since: 16 Apr 2015 Location: Kent Posts: 1277 |
Yeah that's true it probably makes no difference to a single axle. Mainly because generally they don't weigh very much compared to the weight of the tow car. Unless perhaps you had an old mini with a 500kg trailer on it.
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14th Jan 2016 2:03pm |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7923 |
Majority on the axle - but you still want 7-10% on the nose
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14th Jan 2016 2:14pm |
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Zirconblue Member Since: 16 Apr 2015 Location: Kent Posts: 1277 |
no that's true, i didn't word that very well. The nose weight should never be noticeably pushing the back of the car down (bearing in mind the Range Rover has self levelling suspension). if i recall correctly the Range Rover can take 150kg on the tow hitch, or 250 if you have an empty boot. So if you had a 3.5ton trailer with 10% on the nose it will be overloading the tow hitches downward load by 100kg and the arse of the car will be likely sitting on the floor.
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14th Jan 2016 4:33pm |
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Alistair Member Since: 11 Feb 2011 Location: Peterborough / Bordeaux / Andorra Posts: 7923 |
The FFRR is pretty good at self levelling
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14th Jan 2016 5:28pm |
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miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
I think it's safe to say that if you can unhitch your loaded trailer without the hitch jumping up to chin you, you should be ok to tow. If you've too much on the front then you will struggle with the jockey wheel, and if you've too much on the back then the coupling will be a pig to release, and the obvious mind your chin bit
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15th Jan 2016 12:13am |
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miggit Member Since: 12 Jul 2014 Location: Milton Keynes Posts: 3657 |
Oh I forgot to say, a word of warning to all you chaps who load cars, diggers and the like on your trailers, apply the trailer hand brake before loading / unloading......... Many years ago a chap I knew was unloading an excavator from a trailer with the pickup and trailer pointing down a hill, as the excavator got to the rear of the trailer, it caused massive negative nose weight on the trailer. The net result was car trailer and excavator, with him still inside, all when off on a jolly down the hill Yesterday I couldn't spell Engineer... Today I are one!
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15th Jan 2016 12:22am |
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