Ok, I do a lot of trailer pulling, being a truck driver by trade. I own an F350 with a gooseneck 20 plus 5 Big Tex trailer. I typically don't compare the trailers that I pull behind my F350 because they are so much smaller than the 53 and 57 foot trailers I pull in my work. While reading these posts, when I read the first one saying a bumper pull trailer would corner better than a gooseneck, it made me wonder. Then another agreed with him, so it made me question my own thoughts. Geometry is what controls the turning radius of a trailer. The distance the axles are from the rear axle on the truck is what controls the turning radius. Now, if you put 2 identical trucks with the axles exactly in line with each other, will one corner better than the other? I have my doubts, but am willing to be open about that. Now, what I do know, if I am putting either a bumper pull, or a gooseneck into a really tight area, with the bumper pull, I am restricted by just how far I can jack-knife the trailer, such as in making a U-turn, by the tongue of the trailer. Jack-knife a bumper pull trailer too far and you have bent tongues, twisted couplings, bent truck bumpers, etc. With the gooseneck, I can literally turn my truck to almost a 90 degree angle from the trailer allowing me to turn a whole lot tighter. If I need to turn into a really tight driveway, I go past it with my truck, and then jack-knife the truck into a 90 degree position and then pull into the driveway. I can't do that with a bumper pull, it would bend the bumper, etc. Without going out and buying 2 separate identical trailers, there is almost no way for me to make this decision, but I do know that if I were in the market for a new/used trailer, I would take my truck to a trailer place, and hook to both styles! Have someone stand by the hitch as you maneuver it to make sure you don't run into the "you break it, you bought it"!
I sure hope I didn't step on any toes!!
David from jax