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Hitch Ball Removal Tools

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RedOak

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Feb 6, 2010
Messages
97
Ah,I didn't catch that part of the story. Hahaha
Original post was a little tough for me to follow.
Sorry that the OP was hard to follow, but I was damn near frozen and fairly desperate at the time. Yes, although I've done it myself more than once, there was no room under the ball hitch to place a pipe wrench on the ball itself. If this was a story about a ball being stuck to a hitch, our big Ridgid pipe wrench probably would've been the quick end-all solution. 😁
 
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mrbill55

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Jun 23, 2016
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Location
Greenville, SC
Nice post, but the actual hitch latch mechanism that came with the new trailer didn't come loose - despite many many attempts to pull it backwards - until it was off of the truck/trailer and in our fab shop.
If you read my suggestion carefully, you need to use the trailer jack to get the weight off the hitch assembly, it could have been as little as a quarter of a crank, maybe less to balance them both out where you could have chocked the trailer wheels and pulled forward to dislodge the two. This method has worked 100's of times, without fail, when followed to the "T". It's a moot point now, but if you should have this issue in the future, be a little more patient with the process and you'll get yourself out of trouble quickly.

Bill S.
 
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RedOak

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Oh, No, it's Mister Bill!! 😁 I see that you're a fellow southerner, so I can tell you that living through mountain winters is quite a bit different than my days in the deep south. Back home, we sometimes experienced corrosion issues, due to the humidity we lived with, but the work "stuck" can take on a whole different meaning here - especially in sub-zero conditions. Nothing personal, but the word "patience" also has a different meaning under our nasty winter conditions as well.

In the end, the problem was a poorly-designed, cheaply-constructed, stamped-out Chinese hitch latch that doesn't even incorporate any form of cam action to move the latch mechanism. Once again, a ball hitch like this one has no place on a high quality American made equipment trailer, so the ultimate solution will be to bolt one of our Curt pintle rings to the trailer and go right back to employing the pintle hitches we switched to many years ago (for our heavy duty trailers). In fact, I highly recommend this type of setup to anyone who's ever had to go through anything like the stuck ball hitch story I did my best to describe in the OP.

By the way, I gave your post a like yesterday, so, once again, nothing personal intended. Thank you for contributing. :)
 

mrbill55

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Jun 23, 2016
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Greenville, SC
Oh, No, it's Mister Bill!! 😁 I see that you're a fellow southerner, so I can tell you that living through mountain winters is quite a bit different than my days in the deep south. Back home, we sometimes experienced corrosion issues, due to the humidity we lived with, but the work "stuck" can take on a whole different meaning here - especially in sub-zero conditions. Nothing personal, but the word "patience" also has a different meaning under our nasty winter conditions as well.

In the end, the problem was a poorly-designed, cheaply-constructed, stamped-out Chinese hitch latch that doesn't even incorporate any form of cam action to move the latch mechanism. Once again, a ball hitch like this one has no place on a high quality American made equipment trailer, so the ultimate solution will be to bolt one of our Curt pintle rings to the trailer and go right back to employing the pintle hitches we switched to many years ago (for our heavy duty trailers). In fact, I highly recommend this type of setup to anyone who's ever had to go through anything like the stuck ball hitch story I did my best to describe in the OP.

By the way, I gave your post a like yesterday, so, once again, nothing personal intended. Thank you for contributing. :)
Originally from the northeast, spent years at the top of a mountain (7 feet of snow the last year before we moved south a little over 10 years ago), or 1/8 mile from the Ocean, and everything in between. Also had my own shop where you never knew what would be dumped, I mean dropped off at any given moment. I know the conditions of all of the above, and have over 250,000 miles towing various trailers behind my trucks and SUVs.....So quite familiar with your original situation, again, in various forms short of a full size Peterbuilt and 5th wheel, although I have had experience with locked brakes on one axle of a Mack sitting in the middle of my old shop......

Bill S.
 
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RedOak

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I always get a kick out of folks who twist a thread in which someone is simply asking for help into something ... "else" ... something strangely personal. I hope we all realize that these forum threads are voluntary, right?

The problem was solved by a very productive post made by member @Junkdrawer Dog via Post #2. I thought the rest was just friendly discussion. Turning it into something else is rather pointless and a bit sad ... so I repeat, the problem is solved, let's all move on with our lives. Cheers to those who actually tried to help and, as we used to say when I was overseas, "I'm out."
 
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dchawk81

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Sure, that was an alternative, but, at the time, we had arctic-like storm and, needless to say, it was very dark. For security reasons, we use grade 8 hardware to keep our normal pintle hitch rig in the receiver tube. The folks at the trailer lot used the same hardware when they installed the Draw-Tite ball hitch rig. Long story short, it wasn't a matter of simply pulling a pin. Under the circumstances, it was much easier to simply remove the cheap [stuck closed] junk ball hitch assembly - that the dealer sold me - from the trailer itself. No laying on the ice in the dark, which is something this old vet would much rather avoid. ;)
Artic storm, dark, I'm pulling the pin from the receiver tube as the one thing I can do without tools, quickly, and by feel to get my **** back in the warm truck ASAP.

Not sitting out there with an impact wrench removing 8 bolts.
 

i4ni

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Jan 23, 2010
Messages
1,015
Artic storm, dark, I'm pulling the pin from the receiver tube as the one thing I can do without tools, quickly, and by feel to get my **** back in the warm truck ASAP.

Not sitting out there with an impact wrench removing 8 bolts.
I believe he said the receiver was bolted in rather than pinned.
 

Sumboodie

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Mar 20, 2021
Messages
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Location
AK
You talking about the coupler? The hitch is what as attached to the truck which a ball mount or pintle hook attaches to. Trailer has a coupler or lunette.
 

JeepYJ

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Dec 25, 2015
Messages
9,106
He also said he's old and didn't want to crawl around in the snow trying to get to the one bolt.
One bolt(nut) for the hitch ball or one bolt to release the ball mount from the receiver. One seems easier than the other especially when you don’t know or are able to figure out the size or how to keep the ball from turning.
 
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