I was looking thro videos on line. There was a discussion about the breakaway cable and where to attach it. I always attach to the safety chain link on the TV. In the video there had been an incident with a well maintained TV where the entire tow bracket broke off the vehicle taking the hitch and safety chain mounts with it. The camper trailer then just rolled away on its own pulling the entire hitch with it so the breakaway cable never was able to operate. Fortunately the trailer stopped safely.
They recommended putting an eye bolt or loop on the TV bumper or similar totally seperate to the tow bracket.
I will be drilling a hole in my steel bumper for an eyelet before my next trip. The breakaway pulls the pin out of the breakaway switch so it doesn't have to be as sturdy as the safety chain loops. But sturdy enough not to snap off before pulling the pin.
Who knew??
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Factory Victron Solar; Norcold 3-way fridge
'04 Chevy Tahoe Z71 DinoKiller
San Diego, CA
www.airbossone.com
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I think I would notice it banging around long before it fell off.
2018 TAB 320 Boondock (previous)
Odessa, Fl.
Regardless, it is definitely worth pointing out that the breakaway cable needs to be independently attached to the tow vehicle and not to the tow chains. Otherwise, if and when a tow chain link breaks, the trailer brake cable is going to stay with the trailer and will not activate the brakes.
I would be interested in seeing the video if you can post a link to it. Thanks! ("Quick-link" is depicted below.)
(Alde: 3020; Refrig: Isotherm Cruise 65 Eleg; Battery: BB 100Ah LiFePo4; Solar: Renogy 100Ah Suitcase; Victron BMV-712; Pwr Cntr: PD-4135KW2B; EMS: PI-HW30C)
Greg & Marlene (Tucson, AZ)
@Tundra57 @AirBoss @N7SHG_Ham ; I can personally attest to this potential serious safety risk.
Following a trip early last year, I noticed the hitch drooping a bit when I got home. Seemed like it was maybe a half inch lower than it had been before.
There had been some Texas sized potholes and bad roads on the otherwise great trip. But upon teardown, was horrified to see the poor quality of the stock class III hitch (company now out of business), with the bar and hitch literally tearing itself apart from the vehicle frame attachment points. As you can see from photo below, it was only a couple inches from tearing the 3/16" steel attachment bracket just like paper, and completely off, at which point towbar with safety chains attached, and breakaway line, and camper, would have gone who knows where. And I keep my tongue weight at or just under 200 lbs, drive under 65mph, and drive dirt roads at closer to 5mph.
After welding in repairs and significant upgrades with higher quality and thicker steel plate, I not only put a high strength caribiner for the emergency brake line on an independent point on the bumper, but also tied the towbar to vehicle frame with separate segments of steel cable. I also now repeatedly inspect towbar before and during every trip. Haven't had a bit of problems since.
But even though this was a name brand hitch, with a company that had been around quite a while, and a class III hitch version marketed to my specific tow vehicle... their design, materials, and construction standards had clearly been slipping badly.
So yup, everyone at a minimum
TRIGGER WARNING: SCARY PICTURE
First clue:
Former steward of a 2017 T@B S Max
And the OP (Tundra57) is absolutely correct. Who knew, indeed. Before my near miss from catastrophe, I didn't.
Former steward of a 2017 T@B S Max
Factory Victron Solar; Norcold 3-way fridge
'04 Chevy Tahoe Z71 DinoKiller
San Diego, CA
www.airbossone.com
https://fineartamerica.com/profiles/owen-ashurst/shop
That about says all we need to know about that incident.
This is why I am a huge proponant of ONLY factory installed tow equipment. How many manufacturers of especially unibody vehicles sell with a "tow package" that is mostly marketing and the owner is left to fend for themselves installing subbpar hitches incorrectly?
A proper tow package from the factory should include any engine cooling mods, a properly wired seven pin wiring harness, a suitable reciever hitch, possibly beefed up suspension and maybe now days an integrated trailer brake controller. Having an oil or transmission cooler ONLY does the consumer a disservice. My 20 year old Dodge Ram had all of the equipment from the factory when ordered with a trailer package (except an intergrated brake controller), it is time a tow package meant ready to go from the factory for ALL makes!
Best advice!
That hitch falling apart didn't happen overnight, the cracks have rust stains indicating it had been cracking for a long while.
I'm curious about the orientation of the mounting shown in the last photo.. In reference to the bent & cracked piece at the top of the towbar, are we looking at the rear-facing or front-facing side of the towbar? It looks as if it was pushed upwards on this side (or downwards on the opposite side?). I'm trying to understand the direction of the forces that were responsible. You seemed to be saying there were downward forces on the hitch, which seems more consistent with this being the forward facing side of the towbar.
I'm wondering if you had been using a hitch tightener or not? Since you were not concerned about excess tongue weight, I'm wondering if there also may have been some excess forward-rearward forces at play in addition to up-down. Without a hitch tightener, any start/stop motion can be more like a hammer. I guess there's also the possibility of a bad batch of steel.
And yes, be sure not to turn off the battery disconnect switch while traveling - must keep power to the brakes. (Let's see, was that a double or triple negative? Hmm.)
TV: 2005 Toyota Sienna LE (3.3L V6)
RV: 2018 T@B 320S, >100 mods
Since I don't know, I did some research. Not on Forums, but individual State websites. As far I my searching tells me, there is no 'law' regarding attachment point. You have to have one (breakaway cable for trailer brakes) in *most* states for trailers over 3000lbs (this weight varies by state), but the law doesn't specify where it is to be attached, only that it must be capable of "independently" stopping the trailer.
While I do think the occurence is rare, in my newbie inexperienced opinion, it IS worth taking the small extra step to attach the breakaway cable to someplace secure on the TV other than the receiver or hitch. Most receivers *should* be directly and securely attached to the vehicle frame, but some aren't, they can be attached to crossmembers. Bolts and welds can appear ok but be substandard. I agree with others here that regardless of vehicle newness, hitch rating, attach point, etc. all components should be checked regularly. It's unlikely that anyone else cares about your safety (and liability) as much as you do. Everyone makes mistakes - mechanics, manufacturers, dealers, welders, newbies (me!), even those with lots of experience. My point in rambling is that even though everything is manufactured and attached 'right' things can and do fail.
But ultimately, it is user choice on where to attach it.
Towed by 2019 Ram 1500 Rebel 5.7L Hemi 4x4 Crew Cab
cheers
Former steward of a 2017 T@B S Max
cheers
Former steward of a 2017 T@B S Max
m truck is rated for 6500 lbs tow weight, and 600 lbs hitch weight (which becomes part of the trucks cargo rating). The Receiver and ball are rated for 8K, but the truck attachment is going to fail before reaching 8K lbs.
cheers
Those pictures are ugly of the unibody blow out. looks like it was either right at or near the max tongue weight of the hitch/tow vehicle combo.....It should give everyone a moment of pause when reflecting on their set up.
Just reenforces a properly sized and equipt tow vehicle. With a standard under body frame.
I have seen a number of tow bars fall off of tow vehicles. both were ford trucks with factory installed receiver hitches......The gentleman towing the first one had about 500 pounds of water on the tongue....duh. The second the frame was super rusty. Both clearly the fault of the owners.
2020 320s Boondock lite, With Lots of mods
BUT - none of that means something won't go wrong. Like so many things we see, some of these accidents seem very unlikely, until they happen. And they do happen. Certainly wouldn't take too much effort to create a mounting point for the brake cable that is mounted to the bumper or frame.
2018 Ford F-150 2.7L Ecoboost with tow package
PNW