It looks like I have some reading to do tonight.
My 1994 Eagle Model 15 has a very heavy I-beam brace arrangement under the two main frame rails that lead up to the trailer hitch. I have not seen any reference to it in the manuals, but I really wonder if it is very similar to the Prevost 20,000 set up.
I'd like to see a front shot of that TT. I don't see how they get zero tongue weight when the rear connection is behind the axle centerline.Jim
...The major players in the coach conversion market are Angola, Country Coach, Custom Coach Corp, Liberty, Marathon, Royale, and Vantarè. Angola's will have the simplest house systems, Marathon's will have the most complex, proprietary systems. The others will fall somewhere in between. I prefer the KISS principle when it comes to complexity, and if you shop wisely, you, too, can "live rich thru depreciation" with a Prevost, especially in today's market.
OK I still don't understand. If the ball is behind the axle the tongue will push the ball down and since there is only one axle the connection to the bus will have to go up...OH, I get it, no tongue WEIGHT! It doesn't say a darned thing about tongue LIFT. Personally I'm distrustful of attempts to hide what's going on by playing with words, and more to the point, when was tongue lift ever a good thing?Jim A trailer toad is the same principal as what truckers call jeeps to pull double trailers,my friend Don Smith aka Boxcar Okie had one if you going to point a from point b they are ok but you are not going to back a trailer up with one attached and for the price, they are made real cheap plastic fenders and all,Don (RIP) never did care for his one time he left here at my place for 2 months because it was a PITA where he was traveling too