Welded vs bolted trailer balls

   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls
  • Thread Starter
#22  
If you put a lot of miles on, your better off with a bolt on coupler and ball, as the ball will wear on the hitch and the coupler can wear on the trailer if they do they can both be replaced, if the set up is a normal use trailer it would not matter as most likely they will rust out before they wear out. I use the B&W Tow and Stow set up - it gives me a 2 5/16 for the dump and a 2 for the utility, and provides easy height adjustment - nice unit, if you use a little white lithium on pins it's trouble free....

I have seen those, very nice. I do not tow enough-5-6x a year-to justify spending a lot on it. Just want to be sure what I use is safe. It seems, and my assumption may be way off, the less moving parts the less a chance for failure. That is the main reason I went with the welded ball.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls #23  
I have seen those, very nice. I do not tow enough-5-6x a year-to justify spending a lot on it. Just want to be sure what I use is safe. It seems, and my assumption may be way off, the less moving parts the less a chance for failure. That is the main reason I went with the welded ball.
Actually it's the quality that counts and Reese has been around for years and they make a good product - so your fine, I work in the trailer industry, visit many dealers throughout New England - New York, it is hard to believe what they show me they've taken off / repaired trucks / trailers - hitches rusted so badly you could put your finger through it with little force, couplers completely absent of any locking ability - so many people put it on and never check for rust / wear until it's to late..... My hitch goes in with never seize or a little grease on it, and it comes off the truck when it's not in use, the coupler is always oiled / WD 40 the ball always has a light coating of grease on it, Reese actually has a nice ball grease for it - I've never had a problem and never want one.....
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Actually it's the quality that counts and Reese has been around for years and they make a good product - so your fine, I work in the trailer industry, visit many dealers throughout New England - New York, it is hard to believe what they show me they've taken off / repaired trucks / trailers - hitches rusted so badly you could put your finger through it with little force, couplers completely absent of any locking ability - so many people put it on and never check for rust / wear until it's to late..... My hitch goes in with never seize or a little grease on it, and it comes off the truck when it's not in use, the coupler is always oiled / WD 40 the ball always has a light coating of grease on it, Reese actually has a nice ball grease for it - I've never had a problem and never want one.....

Thanks. I have bought a lot of Reese towing products and have not been disappointed.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls #25  
Thanks. I have bought a lot of Reese towing products and have not been disappointed.

Agreed, I have a Reese vertically adjustable 3 ball welded hitch. Works great. Only complaint is slight surface rust on the chrome from storing it in my trailer toolbox. I do keep it oiled but still happened. I never leave it on the truck when not towing. Shins just can't handle that.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls
  • Thread Starter
#26  
Agreed, I have a Reese vertically adjustable 3 ball welded hitch. Works great. Only complaint is slight surface rust on the chrome from storing it in my trailer toolbox. I do keep it oiled but still happened. I never leave it on the truck when not towing. Shins just can't handle that.

I do the same. It only takes one time . Also, when I run thru the automated car wash, the brushes adjust for the hitch ball and do a poor job cleaning the tailgate.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls #27  
I do the same. It only takes one time . Also, when I run thru the automated car wash, the brushes adjust for the hitch ball and do a poor job cleaning the tailgate.

Never understood why some guys leave the stinger in all the time..They end up rusted to the hitch or worse..Plus the pain if you hit it.

Didn't think of the car wash aspect, good point.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls #28  
Think of it as a bumper saver in icy conditions. I've seen cars slowly slide in to the back of trucks, only to be kept from hitting the bumper by the trailer hitch.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls #29  
Think of it as a bumper saver in icy conditions. I've seen cars slowly slide in to the back of trucks, only to be kept from hitting the bumper by the trailer hitch.

A guy rear ended me with the hitch installed in an f150, my bumper got pushed up a bit, and he had a nice 2 in sq. hole in the front of his truck. ac condensor, rad, etc.
 
   / Welded vs bolted trailer balls
  • Thread Starter
#30  
A guy rear ended me with the hitch installed in an f150, my bumper got pushed up a bit, and he had a nice 2 in sq. hole in the front of his truck. ac condensor, rad, etc.

This happened to us in my 05 Chevy 1500. While it did not appear bad, it twisted the hitch and slightly tweaked the frame. He hit us doing about 25mph.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

Tandem Axle Rear Truck Frame (A51692)
Tandem Axle Rear...
MacDon C3012F Corn Head (A53342)
MacDon C3012F Corn...
2021 MDB TF150R 84" HYD MULCHING HEAD (A51406)
2021 MDB TF150R...
Bryant 650AN048-E A/C Unit (A52377)
Bryant 650AN048-E...
Fifth wheel multi use trailer. (A53472)
Fifth wheel multi...
SCHAFFER 2430SLT LOT NUMBER 150 (A53084)
SCHAFFER 2430SLT...
 
Top