Quote:
Originally Posted by dougtoms01
Sawdust,
What I've experience between the concrete and blacktop highways is the expansion/control joints they have to put in the concrete. Seems like about every 12' there is a joint which can cause the traler to bounce. Depending on speed, you can have the TV bounce and then the TT bounce. They can develop a harmonic rythem that can be annoying.
A weight distribution can help reduce this. On my pop-up, adding more tongue weight can help as well. If you have your WDH set up incorrectly, it will make it worse.
Not much more to tell you. Sometimes you can only minimize this affect.
Best regards,
Doug
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I would add to Doug's post about the only other thing you could do to calm the trailer's ride is add shock absorbers (if it is possible to do so) and change your axles to an independent type suspension such as the type Dexter manufactures, which is likely a little pricey.
Not an apples to apples comparison, but I had the MorRyde IS suspension (rubber shear springs and each wheel on a shaft independent of the other) on the fifth wheel we previously owned. It rode and towed like a dream.............everywhere except I-55 in Mississippi between Jackson and the Louisiana border. The expansion joints you mention on that stretch of highway are absolute murder! The trailer porpoised unmercifully even with the IS suspension. The only way I could lessen the misery was to slow to less than 55 mph..........and that lessened but didn't stop it.