fi.na.tine wrote:
Well the boat and trailer are getting a once over as well. Anything I should make sure they take a look at? The bow went into the back of the Durango -
image hosting over 5mbWhat I can figure is that the hitch of the trailer hit the ground, then the safety cables/brake cable grabbed it and brought the nose up as I was stopping, and between the brake cable snapping and the safety cables rubber banding - drove it into the back. I have not checked the skeg or prop, but I don't think it bottomed out on the back.
This looks like a normal result of the hitch coming off the ball. The safety chains are meant to keep the rig attached to the vehicle, so it won't hit anyone else, but as soon as you apply brakes on the tow vehicle, it is going to ram into the back. If the safety chains are crossed under the tongue, then the trailer will stay more centered, but would still do bumper damage and/or tailgate damage if the bow reaches the tailgate.
The break-away cable is meant to be a last ditch safety to apply braking to the trailer in the case that the rig completely separates from the vehicle (including the safety chains). This would hopefully stop the trailer before it hit another vehicle or building. I don't think you should expect it to do anything at all in the situation you had where the rig was still retained by the safety chains. The only way to minimize the damage is to be super easy on the brakes as you bring the vehicle and trailer to a stop.
Ideally, the break-away brake cable should be hooked to the vehicle somewhere else besides the hitch...so that it would do it's job even if the entire hitch assembly came off the vehicle.
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"Knot Easy" 2000 Horizon 240 Volvo 5.7GS /SX
tow: 2017 Honda PILOT EXL-AWD
prev. boats:
'87 Chaparral 198CXL 4.3 OMC Cobra
'69 Jetstar 16ft Ski Boat, 115hp Yamaha
'68 Aluminum Jon Boat, 3hp Sears
'64 Water Wings