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Towing – Airstream INTERNATIONAL CCD User Manual

Page 20

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B

TOWING

B - 4

WEIGHING YOUR TRAILER

The diagram below shows how to weigh the trailer

on scales.

When loading heavy objects such as tools, skillets,

irons, and boxes of canned goods, etc. keep them as

low as possible - preferably on the floor. Try to hold

additional weight behind the axle to a minimum.

CAUTION

: The allowable personal cargo must

be distributed in your trailer in such a manner that

the Gross Axle Weight Rating is not exceeded.

To determine this, it is necessary to load all of your

allowable personal cargo and variable weights.

Then hitch the trailer to the tow vehicle with load

equalizing hitch properly adjusted as shown on the

following pages.

Place the trailer on a scale with both axles only on the

scale (see 2). If the weight on the axles exceeds the

axle system G.A.W.R. then some of the personal

cargo must be redistributed forward in order to place

some of this weight on the tongue.

The tongue weight should be in between 10% - 15%

of the trailer’s total weight, but must not exceed the

manufacturer’s maximum recommended hitch weight

of the tow vehicle or hitch. To determine tongue load,

unhitch tow vehicle and place the tongue hitch post

on a scale. The trailer must be properly loaded as de-

termined above, with your allowable personal cargo

and variable weights.

Used a scale, such as a bathroom scale, that has a

lower weight limit than your tongue load to check

the tongue weight by using the following method

(see illustration).

Place a piece of wood of approximately the same

thickness as the bathroom scales on the ground in

line with the trailer hitch jack as shown. It should be

so spaced that a short piece of pipe or other round

piece will lay exactly one foot from the centerline of

the jack extension. Place the scales so that another

round piece can be exactly two feet from the cen-

terline of the jack extension in the other direction.

Place a 4 x 4 on the two round pieces and screw

the jack extension down on the top of the 4 x 4 until

the tongue of the trailer is supported by it. Multiply

the scale reading by three. This will be the tongue

weight of your trailer. If you exceed the capacity of

the bathroom scales, increase the two-foot dimen-

sion to three or four more feet, but always multiply

the scale reading by the total number of feet between

the wood and scales.

Note: Be sure trailer is level when you read scales.

2 FT.

1 Ft.

Pipe

Pipe

Bathroom Scale

Wood Support