how big of drop hitch do i need to tow a car (5,500ish pound trailer)

Disclaimer: Links on this page pointing to Amazon, eBay and other sites may include affiliate code. If you click them and make a purchase, we may earn a small commission.

WEV

FRF Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Jan 8, 2021
Posts
46
Reaction score
46
Location
Northeast
I found this to be a really good primer for towing:
 

Ruckus08

FRF Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Sep 6, 2018
Posts
124
Reaction score
168
Location
Nashville, Tennessee
thanks @Traffic22 I think I am going with a 6inch adjustable drop. I need to go 325 miles all on interstate, so should not be very difficult.

I’d recommend 6” or 8”, especially if you are planning on larger tires/new leafs/ etc in future. I have an 8” weigh right adjustable that I use for my dual axle trailer when I tow my 6300lb Kubota. 6” would be close if not at the bottom adjustment. But, I do have some suspension upgrades that may make slight difference and it’s a Gen1. Good luck, it’ll pull great.
 

Reaper308

FRF Supporting Member
Supporting Member
Joined
Oct 11, 2020
Posts
532
Reaction score
686
Location
Texas
I’ve towed for years had a land development company with dump trucks and 30,000# trailers it all depends on the ride height of the truck and trailer together like has been mentioned earlier you want the trailer basically level so tongue weight is crucial. If the trailer has room it’s not always best to load or pull vehicles to the very front of the trailer you want the trailer weight evenly distributed so if your tongue weight is heavy back the load up slightly to center and back some of the tongue weight off. Also it all depends on your truck of stock probably a 4” drop would be fine unless the tongue weight is on the higher side than you might not want that big of a drop of the tongue weight is very light you might need the 4” or possible a 6” if your truck has different springs or a lift and your ride height is higher than stock you will need more drop. Hope that helps and have fun!
 

Leprechaun

Member
Joined
Dec 20, 2019
Posts
11
Reaction score
3
Location
Fletcher, NC
I had the same question a few weeks back and went with the 4" Weigh Safe hitch based upon what I was able to find, including:
I just plan on towing a landscape trailer with no more than 7,000 pounds, often much less.
 

StraightSixM2C

Active Member
Joined
Nov 12, 2020
Posts
63
Reaction score
80
Location
NYC
Picture quality sucks but it’s the best I have. The trailer weights 2300lbs empty, it has a relatively low tongue with the coupler height set up for my brothers 2500 duramax. I have the weigh safe 4”. I’m running it upside down to raise the ball. 2” rise I believe. I think the Liberty weighs 4000lbs so I put the trailer weight at around 6500lbs with all my junk in the tool boxes.

The raptor has plenty of power and brakes to tow. Just not the suspension, you end up staring at the sky from the sag in the rear. I never bought it to tow, but it can if needed.

75FB4A03-E8C9-43FC-87AD-2BF3B77FFD03.jpeg
 
OP
OP
goblues38

goblues38

FRF Addict
Joined
Oct 27, 2018
Posts
2,701
Reaction score
4,025
Location
STL
Picture quality sucks but it’s the best I have. The trailer weights 2300lbs empty, it has a relatively low tongue with the coupler height set up for my brothers 2500 duramax. I have the weigh safe 4”. I’m running it upside down to raise the ball. 2” rise I believe. I think the Liberty weighs 4000lbs so I put the trailer weight at around 6500lbs with all my junk in the tool boxes.

The raptor has plenty of power and brakes to tow. Just not the suspension, you end up staring at the sky from the sag in the rear. I never bought it to tow, but it can if needed.

View attachment 163390

This helps. I will have a 3,000 pound car on a Uhaul aluminum trailer.
 

The Car Stereo Company

aka grumpy car stereo guy and frf rolodex
Supporting Member
Joined
Jul 8, 2012
Posts
32,723
Reaction score
23,859
Location
here, on frf
i think a lot of it will be determined by the trailer tongue height as well. cant really determine what kind of drop you want until you know how hight the hitch is. you want your load as level as possible. usually theres about a 2-3 inch drop in the trucks hitch (from what i have seen) with 400lbs in the bed. maybe try to use that for reference to see how low of a drop you need to reach the height of the trailer tongue
 

Traffic22

Full Access Member
Joined
May 3, 2020
Posts
416
Reaction score
337
Location
SF Bay Area
Picture quality sucks but it’s the best I have. The trailer weights 2300lbs empty, it has a relatively low tongue with the coupler height set up for my brothers 2500 duramax. I have the weigh safe 4”. I’m running it upside down to raise the ball. 2” rise I believe. I think the Liberty weighs 4000lbs so I put the trailer weight at around 6500lbs with all my junk in the tool boxes.

The raptor has plenty of power and brakes to tow. Just not the suspension, you end up staring at the sky from the sag in the rear. I never bought it to tow, but it can if needed.

View attachment 163390
I’m really surprised about that amount of sag from one of those little U-Haul trailers. That appears to be slightly more than I get towing with a much heavier trailer, but probably slightly lighter car.

It must be the overall distribution of weight. (I guess an overall weight around 6.5k explains part of it too.j I’m probably closer to 5-5200.


Sent from my iPad using Tapatalk
 
Top