Personally I just look out the drivers mirror when lining the tires up with the trailer, if that side is lined up, so is the other one. Make sure you are lined up before the rear axle goes under the trailer, so you don't have to turn once you start under. This is if you don't have fenders covering your tires, if you do you have to line the fenders up themselves, and it may take a few tries before you get used to exactly where to line them up.
Hooking to a trailer
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Penumbra, Nov 7, 2019.
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If one of the mirrors is pointing too low it can skew your perception.FlaSwampRat Thanks this. -
FlaSwampRat Thanks this.
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dosgatos and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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tscottme and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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I do it everytime so dont feel bad.can count on one hand how many times i hit the kingpin perfect
MGE Dawn, tscottme and FlaSwampRat Thank this. -
I wouldn't worry about it until the kingpin rips off the catwalk. Then you know you might be a little off center.
Qbf594, D.Tibbitt, FlaSwampRat and 1 other person Thank this. -
Odds are that your drives are centered, but the whole tractor is at a slight angle to the trailer. As you go backwards you ho from centered to off center.
Angle to the trailer is the number one issue my guys have with getting coupledD.Tibbitt, FlaSwampRat and Capacity Thank this. -
tscottme and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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You can feel it hit the either side of the 5 wheel and slow your roll , 4 in or so over from the edge of the trailer drivers side , I dont like sliding the dollys sideways on a dropped nice new trailer loaded trailer it tweeks the landing gear , or it could get you hung up and stuck on ice and snow.
D.Tibbitt, Flat Earth Trucker and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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