What is the effect of moving a gooseneck trailer connection point rearward on the load of a hitch?

  • I
  • Thread starter jeredpilot
  • Start date
  • #1
jeredpilot
34
1
TL;DR Summary
How much weight is added to a beam point load by moving the load rearward 20 inches?
Forgive my ignorance of the proper terms. I may be using “leverage”, “lever”, and “cantilever load” incorrectly.

Description:

This concerns a gooseneck hitch connection in a pickup vehicle.

The gooseneck receiver hitch is properly attached to the vehicle and located ~3 inches forward of the rear axle. If I connected the gooseneck trailer to the hitch as designed the weight on the hitch would be directly above the hitch and be 2,500 pounds.

However, for certain reasons I must move the gooseneck trailer connection point rearward 20 inches. The hitch itself (permanently attached to the vehicle) will remain in its properly located position. I will build a hitch extension that displaces the hitch load point rearward 20 inches. This extension will not be in contact at any point with the vehicle other than to the hitch itself and the trailer when connected. So I am moving the 2,500 pound load from directly above the hitch to 20 inches rearward of the hitch.

So, what I need is the formula to calculate what the load on the hitch will be when the load is displaced rearward 20 inches. Is it simply 1.67 times 2,500 pounds which would be 4,166 pounds? (20/12*2500)

Also, I realize there will now be a ‘twisting’ force on the hitch itself. Is that twisting force equal to the new load? How would I calculate this twisting force?

Also, what is the correct terminology to properly describe my problem? This 20 inch extension is a sort of lever. And also this hitch extension acts like a cantilever beam of sorts. I’ve looked and looked for the proper terms to describe my problem, but as yet I am unsure what is correct.

Thanks to anyone that sheds light on my problem.
 
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2
Welcome to PF.

The fifth wheel must remain in the same place on the pickup.
That is required for safety and stability.

A longer gooseneck will reduce the load on the fifth wheel, but that will depend on the axle position(s) and suspension on the towed trailer.

I think you need to produce before and after diagrams of the system.
 
  • #3
Yes. The hitch must remain in its position. I stated in the original post “The hitch itself (permanently attached to the vehicle) will remain in its properly located position.”

The weight on the hitch itself will actually increase, not decrease. Also, the axles on the trailer are fixed and will remain in their factory designed location.

I am merely moving the trailer connection point rearward 20 inches. I will do this by building a beam 20 inches in length. It will only be supported at the hitch itself. So in that sense it is a cantilever beam. (Supported only on one end)

One other minor point, this is a gooseneck hitch, rather than a fifth-wheel. But I think the calculation likely would not change all that much. A fifth-wheel spreads the load around a surface area (a fifth-wheel plate). While a gooseneck has the full load at a certain point.

You may be correct. I’ll draw a diagram for clarification. Thanks.
 
  • #4
jeredpilot said:
I am merely moving the trailer connection point rearward 20 inches.
That is an ambiguous statement.
If you are lengthening the gooseneck, then the trailer moves backwards.
jeredpilot said:
The weight on the hitch itself will actually increase, not decrease.
That statement is not consistent with a longer gooseneck.

The line between the hitch and the trailer axle is a lever.
If you lengthen the hitch end of that lever, so the 2500 lb load moves backwards, then the load on the hitch will be reduced. The trailer axle position is important in that computation.
 
  • #5
I disagree on all points, but I certainly may be incorrect. (Due to not understanding each other)

Drawings incoming in a few minutes.
 
  • #6
Current Configuration
IMG_2964.JPG
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #7
Proposed Configuration
IMG_2963.JPG
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • #8
Baluncore said:
That is an ambiguous statement.
If you are lengthening the gooseneck, then the trailer moves backwards.

That statement is not consistent with a longer gooseneck.

The line between the hitch and the trailer axle is a lever.
If you lengthen the hitch end of that lever, so the 2500 lb load moves backwards, then the load on the hitch will be reduced. The trailer axle position is important in that computation.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_2964.JPG
    IMG_2964.JPG
    72.2 KB · Views: 14
  • #9
Baluncore said:
That is an ambiguous statement.
If you are lengthening the gooseneck, then the trailer moves backwards.

That statement is not consistent with a longer gooseneck.

The line between the hitch and the trailer axle is a lever.
If you lengthen the hitch end of that lever, so the 2500 lb load moves backwards, then the load on the hitch will be reduced. The trailer axle position is important in that computation.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_2963.JPG
    IMG_2963.JPG
    73.6 KB · Views: 13
  • #10
I assume the 20" is a rigid extension of the trailer gooseneck.

What is the distance between the hitch point now, and the mid-point of the tandem axle set?
 
  • #11
Yes. It is rigid.

Length from the trailer connection point to the center of the axles does not change in either configuration. That length is 318.5 inches.
 
  • #12
Car-trailer-4941-0028-FP310009_A.jpeg
 
  • #13
Baluncore said:
I assume the 20" is a rigid extension of the trailer gooseneck.

What is the distance between the hitch point now, and the mid-point of the tandem axle set?
Rather than an extension of "the trailer gooseneck", I would say it is an extension of the hitch. Is that just semantics? Or does it make a difference?
 
  • #14
jeredpilot said:
Is that just semantics? Or does it make a difference?
It is critical.
Your diagram of the trailer does not show the position of the hitch, on the trailer now.
 
  • #15
Baluncore said:
It is critical.
Your diagram of the trailer does not show the position of the hitch, on the trailer now.
Correct me here if I am wrong, please.

But in my mind, if the trailer itself is never changed, and the weight of the downward force of the trailer never changes, then how does the distance of the axles come into play?

To me, if the trailer length never changes and the downward weight never changes, then the trailer axle position is irrelevant? The only thing that changes is the effective position where the trailer connect to the vehicle. Therefore, the trailer axle position is irrelevant? No?
 
  • #16
Baluncore said:
It is critical.
Your diagram of the trailer does not show the position of the hitch, on the trailer now.
The hitch is exactly at the front of the trailer. The very most front of the trailer.
 
  • #17
jeredpilot said:
Yes. It is rigid.

Length from the trailer connection point to the center of the axles does not change in either configuration. That length is 318.5 inches.
318.5 inches
 
  • #18
jeredpilot said:
Therefore, the trailer axle position is irrelevant? No?
NO. The effect of moving the hitch point forward by 20" on the rigid trailer assembly, is proportional to the initial length of the trailer.
The fulcrum of the lever is the mid-point of the tandem axle set.
The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased.

What does the term gooseneck mean to you?
 
  • #19
Baluncore said:
NO. The effect of moving the hitch point forward by 20" on the rigid trailer assembly, is proportional to the initial length of the trailer.
The fulcrum of the lever is the mid-point of the tandem axle set.
The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased.

What does the term gooseneck mean to you?
Gooseneck Hitch:
1707363391449.png
 
  • #20
Baluncore said:
NO. The effect of moving the hitch point forward by 20" on the rigid trailer assembly, is proportional to the initial length of the trailer.
The fulcrum of the lever is the mid-point of the tandem axle set.
The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased.

What does the term gooseneck mean to you?
Fifth-Wheel Hitch (same as tractor-trailer semi truck):

1707363441877.png


1707363467517.png
 
  • #21
Baluncore said:
NO. The effect of moving the hitch point forward by 20" on the rigid trailer assembly, is proportional to the initial length of the trailer.
The fulcrum of the lever is the mid-point of the tandem axle set.
The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased.

What does the term gooseneck mean to you?
But the hitch point is being moved back, not forward.

So the hitch stays fixed, but the ball is moved back 20 inches. So the distance to the hitch itself grows by 20 inches. Since the extension piece is a rigid 20 inches, the length of the trailer increases. I get that. But and effective increased trailer length would add weight to the connection, not reduce it. (???)
 
  • #22
Baluncore said:
NO. The effect of moving the hitch point forward by 20" on the rigid trailer assembly, is proportional to the initial length of the trailer.
The fulcrum of the lever is the mid-point of the tandem axle set.
The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased.

What does the term gooseneck mean to you?
Fifth Wheel on Semi Truck:
1707363931161.png
 
  • #23
Are you a troll ?
 
  • #24
Baluncore said:
Are you a troll ?
Am I a troll?

No. Why do you think I am a troll?
 
  • #25
I am answering every question and trying to understand.

Moving axles rearward adds weigh to the hitch - every single time.

Moving axles forward, lessens weight on a hitch - every single time.
 
  • #26
jeredpilot said:
I am answering every question and trying to understand.

Moving axles rearward adds weigh to the hitch - every single time.

Moving axles forward, lessens weight on a hitch - every single time.
@Baluncore Is this controversial?
 
  • #27
If we place the axles at the very rear of a trailer then the axles are further from the mid balancing point. So since we are moving them to the extreme rear and away from the balancing point, the weight on the hitch increases.

If we place the axles perfectly at the balancing point, then there is no weight on the hitch.
 
  • #28
The axles remain fixed to the trailer, they do not move relative to the gross trailer centre of mass. Why do you now discuss moving them?
 
  • #29
Baluncore said:
The axles remain fixed to the trailer, they do not move relative to the gross trailer centre of mass.
Yes.
 
  • #30
@Baluncore

Maybe this was a typo by you, and thus why I am having difficulty following. But you said this in post number 18.

"The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased."
 
  • #31
There is one point, between the trailer and the tow vehicle, where it can bend. That is the hitch point. You said that is fixed on the tow vehicle.
But the hitch point is being moved on the trailer. In effect, you are lengthening the gooseneck by 20".
The distance between the hitch point and the axles on the trailer is being increased.
 
  • #32
Yes. I follow that.

But in your post number 18 you said: "The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased."

It should increase. Sorry man. I don't want to give you a headache! lol
 
  • #33
Baluncore said:
There is one point, between the trailer and the tow vehicle, where it can bend. That is the hitch point. You said that is fixed on the tow vehicle.
But the hitch point is being moved on the trailer. In effect, you are lengthening the gooseneck by 20".
The distance between the hitch point and the axles on the trailer is being increased.
Okay. I am starting to see why axle length difference to hitch plays into it better. Thanks.

But the weight on the tow vehicle should increase? Correct?
 
  • #34
jeredpilot said:
But in your post number 18 you said: "The effective load on the hitch will be reduced when the distance between the hitch and the axle set is increased."
Stop clouding the issue. I assumed you moved the hitch on the trailer, not the axles.
jeredpilot said:
It should increase. Sorry man. I don't want to give you a headache!
It will increase only in your head. You are letting your confusion confuse you more.
 
Last edited:
  • #35
After further thought, the weight placed on the chassis itself doesn't change, because the tongue weight of the trailer doesn't change. i.e. the trailer's downward force is 2,500 pounds no matter where it is placed on the vehicle.

What does change is the 'twisting' force experienced by the vehicle's hitch itself. This is due to the hitch extension acting as a lever to the hitch. But the weight on the chassis itself stays at 2,500 pounds.

I intend to take the trailer and pickup to a set of truck scales and weigh the weight on the chassis at the varying positions. This will verify what is correct. Undoubtedly, the weight will not be less as you have said a couple of times.

@Baluncore thanks for attempting an answer, At least you now know the difference between a gooseneck hitch and a fifth-wheel hitch. I am glad I could help you.
 

Similar threads

  • Mechanical Engineering
Replies
14
Views
29K
Replies
3
Views
1K
Replies
13
Views
1K
  • Mechanical Engineering
Replies
13
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
2K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
1
Views
1K
  • Introductory Physics Homework Help
Replies
6
Views
2K
Replies
2
Views
1K
  • Engineering and Comp Sci Homework Help
Replies
3
Views
2K
  • Mechanical Engineering
Replies
24
Views
6K
Back
Top