GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #22 | Page 45

RV FEATURE You need to have a level surface to park your van on and ideally it would be smooth concrete, bitumen or brickwork. Not all of us are lucky enough to have easy access to such a surface so if it’s coarse bluechip or grass, then you’ll need a piece of thick timber to support the scales. Make sure the park brake is on and that wheels are chocked. With the timber in place under the coupling and the scales sitting on it, simply raise the caravan on the jockey wheel until you estimate that the piece of timber and scales will be able to slide under. Then check that the scales are level on the ground (or timber) so that when you raise the van the scales do not fall over. Then lower the van’s coupling very carefully onto the scales using the jockey wheel, until the jockey wheel is raised clear of the ground. Do not take the jockey wheel off the van or swivel it up – if the scales do tip over, you’ll want the jockey wheel there to stop the van landing on the A-frame. LOOSEN THE ANTI-RATTLE BOLT Most vehicles’ trailer hitch receivers have a bolt under the hitch that threads into the hitch assembly and stops the tongue from rattling when towing. The thing is, such an anti-rattle bolt is not meant to stay tensioned against the tongue when you’ve hitched up. It’s possible that the tongue might crack at the point it’s pushing against the tip of the bolt. It’s a two-minute job to release the bolt tension off the tongue (not forgetting to nip- up the locking nut once you’re done so the bolt doesn’t unthread itself entirely). Of course, the bolt will need to be slackened off if you’re replacing your towing tongue with another weight distribution hitch tongue anyway – just don’t re-tension it with the new tongue in place. gorv.com.au 45