So about 18 mos. back I packed for a show,I put my 6ft folding card table and my carry on suitcase full of pens in the back seat and I was off.
I recall thinking "maybe I should bring more stuff"
Be careful what you wish for I guess.
See what I mean? :wink: Probably never will. I recall when this happened Ed. Not good, but good you can tell about it. :wink:Yes, we were EXTREMELY fortunate. Trailer hitch and sway bars (2" square metal). The one bar flew about 100' from the scene of the trailer falling onto its side. My Durango was untouched. Drove away, the trailer was loaded on a low boy and carted to the repair place (3 miles or so).
We were lucky, but I don't have any desire to pull that trailer again.
(I pull the little one --10'--all the time)
We did a LOT of shows out of the big trailers, hundreds---but I was ready to get out of that---and most of our friends had already left crafting.
This is when you know you have a serious problem!!
Dang, Ernie! With that rig (about 8 MPG) and the price of Diesel at near $4, you could just call in a moving van cheaper! Then you could fly in with the little brief case, while the moving company sets you up and breaks it down.
For me, Generation 4b: trailer got out of control and I could not stop the "wagging". Went off the road, trailer tipped onto it's side...
For me, Generation 4b: trailer got out of control and I could not stop the "wagging". Went off the road, trailer tipped onto it's side...
Ed, old buddy, that usually means your weight distribution was off with not enough over the tongue. But I'm glad y'all were okay. I hadn't heard this story... must have been during my hiatus. :wink:
This is when you know you have a serious problem!!
2nd as in Car? You can see the front wheel of the 1st one inside the door. The second one is directly behind it.This is when you know you have a serious problem!!
Where is the 2nd one?
And, some trailers are worse than others. I had a custom cab-over cap made for my 1977 pickup truck (that was in the days of 8' boxes.) to avoid using a trailer.Be VERY careful. You are venturing into new territory. At almost every show we do, we see some artist that loses everything by "graduating" (or regressing) by moving to a "rig".
Trailers ABSOLUTELY need to be loaded with a distribution directly over the axle. HOW it is distributed has as much to do with the conditions that you must travel through, the roads that you travel and FYI, pulling ANY class V trailer over 45 MPH is a speed violation in almost every state.
You can put all the "anti sway" bar you want on it. You can even attach a drawbar on each side of the rear tow mount to augment the hitch. If the trailer is loaded wrong, you are still gonna wreck it. We see it every week.
Not lecturing, just saying be careful. With small class III &. V trailers, 3 things can happen .... And two of those things are very bad.