Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong

   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,781  
There's definitely good reason for having 2-5/16". I think the original argument made a good point though, in that 2" and 1-7/8" are so similar that having both of these standards yields more trouble than solutions.

How many of us have backed up to a trailer where the tongue is coated in paint so thick you can't even find the stamped coupler size? Towing a lot of boats at the marina, this was a constant source of frustration. I had to always make sure I had both size balls in the truck, and the ball size I needed was always on the wrong height (drop) hitch.

Having both 1-7/8" and 2" standards should have never been allowed, and discontinuing one or the other cannot come soon enough, IMO. I honestly wonder how many trailers hop off balls every year, due to people putting 2" couplers onto their 1-7/8" balls, not even realizing it's not a match. When you skip up to 2-5/16", the mismatch is obvious to even the most amateur hauler, but I could see a lot of less experienced people mixing up the smaller two sizes without even realizing it.
There are a bunch that come off with people putting 2 5/16 on a 2" ball as well. People don't pay attention. Get complacent, etc....

My father in law stopped by to pick up the tractor.

Borrowed a trailer from his friend.

My brother in law guided pops back and hooked the trailer up for him.

They get to my place. Pops brings the tractor around.

I stop him until I can chock the trailer tires.

Pops starts up the trailer and the tongue flies up off the ball

If I hadn't chocked the tires, the trailer tongue would have gone through the back window of my mother in laws buggy

Brother in law latched the hitch, but neglected to make sure it was on the ball properly before latching.

It was sitting on top of the ball.

I pulled my father in law off to the side and mentioned that is the exact reason, I do not allow someone to hook up a trailer for me.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,782  
There's definitely good reason for having 2-5/16". I think the original argument made a good point though, in that 2" and 1-7/8" are so similar that having both of these standards yields more trouble than solutions.

How many of us have backed up to a trailer where the tongue is coated in paint so thick you can't even find the stamped coupler size? Towing a lot of boats at the marina, this was a constant source of frustration. I had to always make sure I had both size balls in the truck, and the ball size I needed was always on the wrong height (drop) hitch.

Having both 1-7/8" and 2" standards should have never been allowed, and discontinuing one or the other cannot come soon enough, IMO. I honestly wonder how many trailers hop off balls every year, due to people putting 2" couplers onto their 1-7/8" balls, not even realizing it's not a match. When you skip up to 2-5/16", the mismatch is obvious to even the most amateur hauler, but I could see a lot of less experienced people mixing up the smaller two sizes without even realizing it.
On a side note. I haven't seen 1 7/8 for quite a while. Even the wood splitter I purchased about 8 years ago came set up for a 2" ball.

I think the only thing I've seen set up for 1 7/8 in 20 years was pops Harbor Freight 4x6 utility trailer.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,783  
On a side note. I haven't seen 1 7/8 for quite a while. Even the wood splitter I purchased about 8 years ago came set up for a 2" ball.

I think the only thing I've seen set up for 1 7/8 in 20 years was pops Harbor Freight 4x6 utility trailer.
Yeah, I've been noticing the same. All of my newer light trailers, and yes... even my little log splitter, are 2".

I race Thistle Class sailboats, and because the heyday of that class was somewhere between 1950 and 1990, there are a lot of older trailers floating around in the fleet. For those guys 1-7/8" seems to be the most common, and even my own Thistle trailer is a restored 1980's Wesco with a 1-7/8" ball coupler welded onto it from the factory.

So, maybe it's that 1-7/8" used to be more common than it is today, and trailer manufacturers have already seen and addressed this potential problem.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,784  
Growing up 1 7/8 was the standard, 2 was unheard of.
By the time I got old enough to tow things, both were in use but 2 came to be standard.
Never saw a 2 5/16 until a few years ago & still don't have anything that uses that size ball.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,785  
I should probably explain my fetish for having receiver tubing on most everything.
I've been thinking of putting a receiver on the back of my rotary mower and/or my tiller, so I can tow my log splitter easily and have a big counterweight on the tractor to handle totes of wood.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,786  
I think the only thing I've seen set up for 1 7/8 in 20 years was pops Harbor Freight 4x6 utility trailer.
Even the first 4x8 Harbor Freight trailer I bought in the '90s came with a 2-inch coupler. Of course, they're rated at a whopping 2,000 lbs.

Pieces of crap, really, but cheap enough to have around and use on the property when real trailers aren't needed. Well, at least they used to be cheap.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,787  
My log splitter has a 1 7/8", and I used to have a 3-rail motorcycle trailer that was 1 7/8".
Yes it's a pain, I should swap the coupler.

Come to think of it
1725378858532.png

for $16 I'll definitely swap the coupler. I'm sure the HF coupler will stand up to the rigors of occasionally moving the log splitter a couple hundred feet here or there on the land...

Derp, why didn't I think of that.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,788  
When I bought the little 4 ft x 4 ft HF trailer for a camping Jeep trailer, I insisted they give me a 2" coupler in place of the 1-7/8.

And I bought and installed a 2" coupler on the second 4x4 trailer that I modified with a Tote, to make it into an orchard watering trailer. That trailer is grossly overloaded but in 10+ years use nothing has broken - to my surprise.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,789  
That trailer is grossly overloaded but in 10+ years use nothing has broken - to my surprise.
I've managed to bend the axle a bit on one 4x8 by overloading it big time, but a weak spot is where the two halves come together in the middle.

Some reinforcements in that area took care of it.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #20,790  
There are a bunch that come off with people putting 2 5/16 on a 2" ball as well. People don't pay attention. Get complacent, etc....
My dear neighbor, old man Bob, hauled his 10k dump trailer for YEARS using a 2" ball. I didn't discover it until my other neighbor buddy borrowed it one day and I saw up close what he was doing. Neither of them noticed any issue at all, thought it was fine. I bought them both 10k rated 2-5/16" hitch insert balls the next day.
 

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