rmchad
Heartland Owner
I just returned from picking up my Sundance 3300 RLB – a good thousand mile drive to break in the tow vehicle and the Sundance. Many cracks in the road (especially on concrete highways) caused the truck to propose/chuck/rock. I never felt out of control, but it is noticeable.
I have rear Timbrens on the stock Dodge 2500 Megacab 4x4. With no load they have about a 3/4 to 1” gap to the axle. With the 5th wheel attached, the Timbrens compress about 1/2 “ – the 5th wheel sits just right. The hitch is a B&W Companion. I weighed the rig at a certified scale and everything is within the specs, with one oddity:
Truck front axle: 4780 lbs (5200 lbs is max rating)
Truck rear axle: 5560 lbs (6010 lbs is max rating)
Sundance gross axle weight: 8240lb
The oddity:
Sundance front axle: 5360 lbs
Sundance rear axle: 2880 lbs
The trailer was empty, so it should be close to its spec dry weight of 9850 lbs. I don’t understand why the big difference in the axle weights – is it because we have not loaded up stuff in the back yet? Tires on truck and trailer were all at the rated pressures.
Any ideas for limiting the proposing? Will a packed trailer help? Could Timbrens on the front axle help? I like to avoid adding airbags due to cost and I don’t know if they would help a lot.
I appreciate your ideas.
And yes, I love my Heartland (but we still need to put it to real use)!
I have rear Timbrens on the stock Dodge 2500 Megacab 4x4. With no load they have about a 3/4 to 1” gap to the axle. With the 5th wheel attached, the Timbrens compress about 1/2 “ – the 5th wheel sits just right. The hitch is a B&W Companion. I weighed the rig at a certified scale and everything is within the specs, with one oddity:
Truck front axle: 4780 lbs (5200 lbs is max rating)
Truck rear axle: 5560 lbs (6010 lbs is max rating)
Sundance gross axle weight: 8240lb
The oddity:
Sundance front axle: 5360 lbs
Sundance rear axle: 2880 lbs
The trailer was empty, so it should be close to its spec dry weight of 9850 lbs. I don’t understand why the big difference in the axle weights – is it because we have not loaded up stuff in the back yet? Tires on truck and trailer were all at the rated pressures.
Any ideas for limiting the proposing? Will a packed trailer help? Could Timbrens on the front axle help? I like to avoid adding airbags due to cost and I don’t know if they would help a lot.
I appreciate your ideas.
And yes, I love my Heartland (but we still need to put it to real use)!