gayler
Well-known member
How do you decide on the length of the tongue to make a trailer easy to back?
Lower the tailgate on your truck.
Make sure the trailer jack will clear it when the tailgate is down, including at full **** of the trailer.
Everything else is personal preference.
It ***** when you need in the back of the truck and the tail gate won't lay down.
Many factory built trailers interfere with my tailgate.
math.![]()
Care to share the equation? Should it be at least X number of inches or feet from the axle to front of tongue?
So an 8 foot wide trailer, 10 feet long has the axle in the same place as an 8x40 feet trailer?
Unless by minimum you mean maybe not even?
I'm just not following the axle on a 40 foot long trailer being 12 feet back and the axle on a ten foot long trailer being 12 feet back.
But I am so bad at math that I must be wrong.
It's not just the tongue length, but the distance from the axle to the coupler. Long length, like a boat trailer, reacts slower to steering input and is easier to back up. Short trailers react quicker and tend to jackknife easily. A longer tongue, as measured from coupler to the front of the bed, will keep you from hitting your tow vehicle when backing up.
So I'm still not getting it.
On a 10 foot trailer at 50/50 (which was not in your original equation), my 12 foot from the axle (8x1.5), minus 5feet for the 50 percent of the actual trailer bed, leaves me a 7 foot long tongue minimum or my trailer is Waggy? 7 plus 10 is 17. Or 12 feet from the axle plus the behind the axle 5 feet is 17 feet. My 10 foot trailer is 17 feet end to end, minimum?
And a narrower trailer would not be as Waggy?
If I'm missing something let me know. I can't be the only one, but I am indeed often the only one.
If your formula is about what is comfortable and not science, I get it as a starting place, once you take the tow vehicles wheelbase in to consideration.