This ^^^ sounds just like me.If you think a coach is unwieldly, take a look at this rig. 76 feet long.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tQ9gdj2VgHwYour coach has a ton of weight on the rear axle if you lift the tag. That truck only has about 10,000 pounds on the rear axle and the whole unit weighs nearly 40,000 pounds. The truck weighs about 18K. The Mobile Suites is another 17K. The Smart car and dolly are another 2.5K, but is carried by its own axle. The font axle on the truck will weigh 12K. The Mobile Suite axles will be hauling at least 12K, probably 15K. Leaving the car out of it, 35K - 24K = 11K on the drive axle, maybe less.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4qHh7huwoc4
Their videos are amusing - not sure if they are expecting to be able to take that where ever one would normally go with a 5th wheel pulled by a pickup, but they try. More than a couple of problems for them.
Get ready they passed new laws where the 5th wheels can be 45 ft long just the 5th wheel
They can pass all the laws they want, but it's not automatically going to make the campgrounds any easier to maneuver. It's just going to encourage more people to take too-large rigs in places they shouldn't be.I've seen 53-foot trailers made into 'motor home' trailers. Doubt we're going to see them accommodated in a campground any time soon either.
Doesn't the ring gear have to be on the other side of the pinion to get the correct rotation? That means a different carrier housing (hogs head) to get the right pinion height and reverse cut gears doesn't it? So then the only thing interchangeable in the hogs head would be the differential carrier.
Thinking about this further, I'm guessing the bus drive axles use the same "differential carrier" but spin it 180 degrees in the differential housing, ie upside down from how it runs in the trucks. That would put the ring gear on the other side and drive the axles in the right direction.I should call a gear shop and find out.
A coach pivots on the drive axle if the tag is lifted.