But Weight! There's More!
One of the most frequently asked questions we get, (and I know you are all dying to know) is “How much does it weigh?”
If you're interested in an empty, unladen, dry weight I'm going to disappoint you. Our first weighing was done at a CAT scale, loaded with everything except water. We were actually coming back from a trip with the kids in tow so the water tank was dry. We still had some food in the kitchen, the kids clothes, sleeping bags, backpacks,and other assorted stuff were piled on the bed. We figured this was a good simulation of being loaded with food, wine and drinking water. The truck was loaded with four people and a bed of gear (tent, cots,an EZ Up, chainsaw, gas, etc)
You can see:
Truck +Trailer = 9740 lbs
Truck with trailer tongue = 7100 lbs
Trailer axle while connected to truck = 2640
Truck alone = 6500 lbs
Some quick math:
7100 lbs – 6500 lbs = 600 lbs Tongue weight
2640 +600(tongue) + 320 (water tank when full) = 3560 lbs Trailer weight(loaded)
OK, now I hear you saying: “Dude! That's heavy! The tongue weight is tremendous!” Yes, yes it is.
Somethings to note:
First:
We tow with a fullsize truck. It's rated for twice what the trailer weighs, and the tongue weight is right at it's maximum rating.
Second:
Total trailer weight, the teardrop holds all the camping gear Beth and I use for a trip. Yep, all the gear. The extra storage built into the teardrop frees up the truck totally. The truck only hauls extra gear when the kids are along, or if we decide we need something extra like the kayaks, chainsaw or generator.
Third:
Tongue Weight. Yes 600 lbs is high, but it is only 16.85% of the weight of the trailer, not far off the 15% maximum it should be. Now, consider the axle sits too far back in the wheel well. Look at it. It's well behind the center-line of the fender. It looks funny.It looks wrong. It's back about four inches farther than it's supposed to be. If the axle were in the right position the tongue would be lighter.
<-----FRONT of trailer
“So,just move the axle forward” Yeah, yeah. I hear you. That's been the plan from the first day we picked up the trailer. That project was put on the back burner until now.
We set aside a weekend. Raised the trailer up, took the tires off and unbolted the axle. Our thought was we could just unbolt the hangar brackets from the frame, slide them forward 4 – 6 inches, drill some new holes and rebolt the brackets to the frame. Except one of the cross-members is in the way. Moving the brackets just ahead of the cross-member would put the axle too far forward. The tire would sit too close to the fender, extremely close to rubbing the inner fender.
We wound up going to a local fabricator,
Area 51 Fabrications, and had these brackets made up.
The top brackets are the originals. The bottom ones are our new ones.They are 10 inches long, use the original mounting holes for the back of each bracket, and the spring hangars are 4 inches forward of the originals. The cutout in the one bracket slips around the offending cross-member. A big Thank You! to Area 51. They were friendly, easy to deal with, and quick to produce our brackets at an extremely reasonable price.
Once all the holes were drilled, the new brackets were bolted to the frame.
...
The springs bolted back on, tires added and the trailer was all better again. The tires are now pretty well centered in the fender. It looks much better, doesn't it?
<-------FRONT of trailer
The last thing we had to do? Reweigh the setup to see how much the tongue weight changed. We filled the water tank up, added the full complement of gear (no food or drinks though! Oops!) and drove to the nearest CAT Scale.
Truck +Trailer = 9120 lbs
Truck with Trailer tongue = 6180 lbs
Trailer axle while connected to truck = 2940 lbs
Truck alone = 5720 lbs
More quick math!
6180 lbs – 5720 lbs = 460 lbs Tongue Weight
2940 lbs + 460 lbs = 3400 lbs Total Trailer Weight
Moving the axle forward 4 inches took 140 lbs off the trailer tongue! That 460 lbs is right about 13% of the trailer weight, right ********** dab in the middle of the "recommended" tongue weights (recommended tongue weights are commonly between 10 and 15 % of the total trailer weight) I'd call that a success.