GORV - Digital Magazine Issue #40 | Page 12

Add the extra weight of a spare tyre, or any heavy object really, to the back, and that bounce will be magnified. Perhaps not to the point where cupboard doors fall off or benchtops delaminate, but I wouldn’t bet on it. EFFECT ON BALL WEIGHT Locating that second spare tyre at the rear of your caravan reduces your van’s towball weight. As you’d know, every caravan needs to impose a certain percentage of its overall weight onto the towball in order to remain stable when under tow. A rear-heavy caravan is an all-but-certain recipe for disaster. To find out how much a second spare wheel could reduce ball weight, I visited the RV Repair Centre in Bayswater, Vic. A single-axle van with a single spare wheel and room for a second was waiting for me. We weighed the ball weight without the second spare wheel and found it had a ball weight of 263kg. We also weighed the wheel: 36kg. WHY? Collyn Rivers, an RV book publisher and exresearch engineer for Vauxhall Bedford, explains that all caravans, to a greater or lesser degree, will have a tendency to sway. This could be due to crosswinds, a passing road train, or changes in the road’s surface. Too much weight at either the front or rear of a caravan has the potential to create ‘yaw inertia’. Because these two areas of mass are further away from the pivot point (the axle/s), they will tend to increase the oscillation of the caravan, rather than be damped by the tow vehicle. To overcome this, it is essential that as much mass as possible is kept near the centre of the pivot point, on the floor or around the chassis wherever possible. Heavy items should thereafter be gradually loaded towards the front of the van. After mounting this tyre to the rear of the van, we re-weighed the ball weight. It had reduced by 17kg to 246kg. Now, 17kg might not sound like much, but in essence we had added 36kg to the back and reduced the nose weight by 17kg, and in doing so substantially reduced the caravan’s towing stability and maximum towing speed, and increased the possibility the rig could jack-knife. The spare wheel weighed 36kg – surprisingly heavy.