IslandTractor
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Sep 15, 2005
- Messages
- 15,802
- Location
- Prudence Island, RI
- Tractor
- 2007 Kioti DK40se HST, Woods BH
"What's the problem? U-Haul has no balls?"
Nah, U haul has too many mismatched balls.
"What's the problem? U-Haul has no balls?"
When did they standardize? I've never found it difficult to select between the 3 sizes in the U.S.The key difference is that all Eurohitches are one size so they are certainly not "fundamentally identical" to ours. An engineering solution is always better than hoping an operator will choose the right ball during the rain at night before hauling a ton of firewood down the highway.
Nah, get rid of all of the receiver hitches and go to the European solid permanently mounted system. One size fits all. No muss no fuss.
When did they standardize? I've never found it difficult to select between the 3 sizes in the U.S.
My Land Rover have a proprietary adaptor to provide a 2in receiver, it's an LR3 and has a higher towing capacity as my dad's F150 so seems to be pretty stout.
I don't mind the look a a receiver honestly, heck my truck has 2!
View attachment 518321
There's 2 different hitches for the LR, I have the one that drops it and moves it back, that one is hard to hook a receiver to. I need to try to trade for the other style that comes straight off the mount (much higher and not as recessed).My Range Rover is problematic for towing... not the power or traction... it is the placement of the factory hitch... it is too low and recessed for many applications and the manual has several cautions about using any type of "Extender" as it significantly changes the geometry...
Had a nice Chipper reserved for the day and there was no way possible to make the hitch work... thankfully, a friend on Speed Dial with a new F150 came to the rescue!...
The metric ball does one very important thing: it eliminates the confusion and potentially catastrophic consequences of putting a 2" hitch on a 1+7/8" ball.
Think about any well engineered safety system. It would never have two nearly identical but incompatible parts where the wrong choice could lead to a severe accident.
Looks take some getting used to but imo it's actually less of a visual eyesore than a 2x2 receiver hitch.
Ugly part! Like a lot of Euro items. No thanks. And I'll stick with our good old SAE stuff. Other than the "me too" aspect there is zero material benefit to moving to the metric system. It doesn't do anything better, just different. And if someone says "well, it's easier to work with the numbers in base 10 than fractions" then I guess they're a product of new math. Fractions aren't that difficult. Embrace our differences, don't scorn them!
Rob
Don't know but once was enough... I know because when I came to pick up the truck the pallet with about thirty 60# sacks was in my short stepside bed...
He offered me the left over but unless there is a need... it doesn't keep long around here.
I can only imagine if I had a fleetside long bed just how many more sacks he could have fit...
I've found I can have up to 7 pallets delivered to a job for one delivery fee... much easier all around.
Prior to that I was picking up with my utility trailer... all the time.
Wasn't the CDL created to prevent that? I remember a saying the only the best will drive. Sarcasm.Unfortunately, drivers train themselves to ignore the LED so they can spread-dump; and if equipped with an alarm, they rip it totally out or bypass it. What is needed is something that limits the truck speed to 5MPH or less if the dump is raised. Such a thing does not yet exist.