Dropped then hooked my trailer for first time.
When I hooked it. Jaws didn't close completely. Kept trying with it. Some slack there also. Rehooked a couple times. Hit it hard too.
Played with it. Anally made sure jaws centered on kingpin. Took it on a bumpy road. Jaws worked completely shut. No play whatsoever on the kingpin now.
So... Just dirty grease? Clean out and replace with new grease?
What ya think....
This is a heavier 5th wheel than typcal 80k setup. I haul 87k. 20 wheeler. No bolt on front of 5th wheel to check, or look at.
What you think.... 5th wheel jaws
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by WesternPlains, Sep 25, 2019.
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MACK E-6, Lepton1 and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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You should pull the plate off once a year to steam clean and degrease it.
That way you can really give it the once over.WesternPlains, DougA, Lepton1 and 1 other person Thank this. -
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Haven't tried to find any model or brand. It's on a Kenworth. Old enough to run without elogs.
The pulling on the handle to release was smooth as silk.Intothesunset and Art Vandelay Thank this. -
Clean it up and grease it, talking about the locking jaws, not the top plate, and try it, it should positively lock with a gentle back into the trailer. Back in right and you will hear it lock, if it doesn't, and you are on level ground, and the trailer is not too high, get it rebuilt or replaced, before it does more than cause you a hard time.
Intothesunset, Cattleman84, MACK E-6 and 1 other person Thank this. -
I’ve had something like that happen to my 5th wheel before, and I’m starting to think sometimes it’s because the trailer is on an unleveled surface. You want to make sure the 5th wheel is making good contact with the bottom of the trailer from both sides (driver and passenger).
I remember Stevens Transport mechanic shop had a long pole with a kingpin attached at the end. They used it to check the 5th wheel. The mechanic said my 5th wheel was fine.MACK E-6 and WesternPlains Thank this. -
Our shop has the same tool. Every shop should.Intothesunset, PE_T and WesternPlains Thank this.
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Could you get a pic of said tool... I want to build something for checking fifth wheels for propper locking and excessive slack.
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Something like this?
Intothesunset, jamespmack, WesternPlains and 1 other person Thank this. -
I believe its law up here to have one if the shop is certified to perform commercial vehicle inspections.
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The one I saw was more basic. It’s possible someone created it by welding a kingpin to a long pole/bar.
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That's pretty fancy. The ones I have seen are just a pin welded to a eight foot bar with some knuckel head humping it.
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