hi,just bought a second hand caravan that has the old tow hitch.on drive home i found that the van suffered with wind and was not very stable.someone said i should fit a stabalizer as it will cure this problem,can anyone please give me any details,thanks,rod.
When you say the old tow hitch, do you mean the very old cast iron type or the pressed steel version? This all depends on the age of the caravan of course.
You could fit a leaf spring type stabiliser on either of the two but If it's the pressed steel type hitch it would be advisable to replace with an Alko stabiliser instead for several reasons if you can afford to invest in buying one. Depending on the weight of caravan depends which one you require but the smallest one is an Alko 1300 which is designed to cope with a maximum of 1300 kgs. laden weight but my advice is to go the next one up for anything 1200 kgs. and above. To give you an idea of the sort I am referring to see the link but if you did decide fit an Alko stabiliser you would have to change the standard towball to an Alko one which is also provided in the full kit as shown.
Whatever stabiliser you fit it will add cost & complication. If you were towing an empty caravan home, & I'm guessing you did not check noseweight or tyre pressures, I suggest you load caravan to how it will normally be run, set noseweight correctly for your car, set car tyre pressures for max loaded weight & caravan tyre pressures as specified, then see if you need a stabiliser.
Blade type is cheapest, but awkward. Alko stabiliser hitch which bolts on in place of standard hitch costs £200odd.
thanks,tango/tentz, its the pressed steel type i think, yes was fairly empty at the time. as you can guess i am new with a caravan having upgraded from a folding camper.can i whisper what is meant by nose weight.rod.
The nose weight is the weight of the caravan towing hitch where you couple up to the car (where the jockey wheel is). You need to find out what the maximum weight of the towball can take as cars can vary from 50 kgs. upwards. When you know this figure, you need to buy a noseweight gauge that you place between the caravan hitch and level ground. This will show a reading on the gauge which identifies what the nose weight is. The noseweight capababilty on mine is 75 kgs. so I have to adjust the weight in the caravan to achieve this and sometimes it's a nightmare. I had to change from 2 x steel Calor 6kg. cylinders to 2 x Calor lite cylinders which are half the weight of the steel ones. Then I had a cast iron bbq that had to taken from the front locker to make the caravan lighter so you can now understand that the nose weight contributes to towing stability.
It's not difficult but there are a few things to pick up when you first start towing a caravan, like nose weight, correct loading, tyre pressures etc.
I found this site invaluable when I first started, lots of useful info in the archives.
If you want some more info you can visit either the Caravan Club or Camping and Caravan Club web sites, they both have advice sections open to non-members.
it is just possible after picking up the caravan that the nose weight was too light,this can cause sway because as you drive it gets lighter from the lift.find your max cars nose weight and meet this but not over this and it should be more stable.a good balanced caravan is the first requirement.no heavy weight at the rear end as this gives a pendulum effect.tyre pressures must set to the correct pressure.