You guys leaving the landing gear off the ground and lowering with the air bags are a pain in the rear for me. My truck doesn't have an air dump. I'm usually out there cranking up a loaded trailer because the nose hits the back of the fifth wheel too low to lift it. And yes you can crank it up, but it's definitely a work out.
Is there a certain way to drop a trailer?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Canadianhauler21, Jul 14, 2018.
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I would be putting pressure on the truck owner to put in a dump kit.
Adding rear suspension dump valve -
It's not so bad with a new trailer, but old trailers are often hard to lower when loaded. All of our trucks have air dumps.olddog_newtricks Thanks this. -
I see some of you don’t do much work dropping and hookiing on snow and ice.
special-k and rabbiporkchop Thank this. -
spyder7723 Thanks this.
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Should we do something different for those conditions? -
Yes, but there are a whole lot of factors that go into just how high off the ground you are leaving it.
Is there a chance the tractor taking it from there has 24.5 rubber? Is it on level ground? Does the landing gear have "give" on the feet, or are they solid? Do you have fenders that you could destroy coming out from under a flat deck with winches? How high is your fifth wheel mounted? Is the ground soft? Is there snow/ice on the ground?
With 22.5 tires, I set the feet on the ground, give it a few extra turns till the suspension hisses, then pull the truck fowards, unlocking the jaws, then waiting until the air suspension fully empties before continuing forwards. It's a perfect drop every time. No push from the trailer, and nice and smooth.special-k, BryE and spyder7723 Thank this. -
special-k Thanks this.
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Zeviander Thanks this.
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rabbiporkchop and Dumdriver Thank this.
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