KAB
Gold Member
I was not trying to be critical of your post but just clarifying your statement of </font><font color="blue" class="small">( It is recommended to have a minimum of 15 percent of you total towed weight on the tongue. )</font>
edit:
Yes, Excessive tongue weight can be bad depending on the tow vehicle. Remember that tongue weight is also payload. If you have a vehicle with 1500# payload and towing a 7000# trailer with 20% tongue weight, you have an available reserve payload of 100#. Add driver, passenger, load in bed of truck, hitch, favorite beverage, and whatever else you might carry with you, the truck could very easily exceed GVW or axle ratings. (If you really want to get exact you can also figure out what the real affect of tongue weight is by some "simple math" - ((distance from rear axle to ball / vehicle wheel base * .5) + 1 ) * Tongue Weight = tongue weight effect on rear axle) (the .5 is an approximate used to get the center of gravity)
Once again - This can vary by vehicle. Get the numbers, do the math, the truth is out there.
Kurt
edit:
Yes, Excessive tongue weight can be bad depending on the tow vehicle. Remember that tongue weight is also payload. If you have a vehicle with 1500# payload and towing a 7000# trailer with 20% tongue weight, you have an available reserve payload of 100#. Add driver, passenger, load in bed of truck, hitch, favorite beverage, and whatever else you might carry with you, the truck could very easily exceed GVW or axle ratings. (If you really want to get exact you can also figure out what the real affect of tongue weight is by some "simple math" - ((distance from rear axle to ball / vehicle wheel base * .5) + 1 ) * Tongue Weight = tongue weight effect on rear axle) (the .5 is an approximate used to get the center of gravity)
Once again - This can vary by vehicle. Get the numbers, do the math, the truth is out there.
Kurt