Last year. while messing around with tire pressure, I wanted to know that myself. I got a very general idea just by placing two bathroom scales under the front tires. The weight distribution came out to be about 50/50 front to rear - without rider or cargo. That was close enough for what I wanted to do and it was quick and what I had on hand. If you need more accuracy you can use better scales but the process is the same.
About one 1/3rd of your towing load should be on the towing vehicle's trailer hitch.
Most of the information I have seen on trailer tongue weight is that it should be 9-15% of the loaded weight of the trailer. Some boat trailer manufacturers recommend a 20% tongue weight because boat trailers typically have the axle further away from the trailer coupler because of the unique shape of a boat with most of the weight aft and less forward. Too much tongue weight can make the front axle of the tow vehicle too light and affect steering control.
How the heck do you actually measure everything so that the balance point is 9-15% front-of-center anyway? :dontknow:
Not aiming to be picky here, just adding to the available info....
I've weighed over 50 each of RT's & F3's during my 'tire research' (plus a bunch of 'other models'!) usually with a solo rider/general load aboard, & the average weight balance pans out as follows:
RT's (basically irrespective of motor) Fr/Rr = 55/45;
while the F3's are more Fr/Rr = 60/40
Those RT's that I've weighed without a rider or passenger have tended to show a bit closer to a 50/50 weight balance, but once anyone gets aboard (in the normal seating arrangement!!) the weight balance starts trending forwards - loading it up or riding 2up pushes more of the increased weight forwards than settles on the back wheel - isn't suspension design just a wonderful thing!! :thumbup:
The bad news for this particular discussion is that many of the Spyders I weighed or collected info about, actually had trailers of various types & weights with them - & if I'd been a bit smarter I could've added some trailer weight & loading info into the collected data, but as it was, I only looked for laden Spyder weights: total, front wheels, & rear wheels - with no trailer connected. Sorry!![]()
About one 1/3rd of your towing load should be on the towing vehicle's trailer hitch. The bed of the trailer should be flat or tipped slightly down in the front. Hook up your trailer load your spyder and block the tires. Put the spyder in neutral and move it back and forth a bit and see what you get. Remember, you do not want the tongue ever to be higher than the tail of the trailer. About a two inch drop in tongue height would be good.
Don't try and over-think this: just keep it "nose heavy", and you'll be fine... :thumbup:
How the heck do you actually measure everything so that the balance point is 9-15% front-of-center anyway? :dontknow:
50/50? I would have bet that the front tires would have carried more of the load...
Thanks for straightening-out, my incorrect assumption! :thumbup:
Don't try and over-think this: just keep it "nose heavy", and you'll be fine... :thumbup:
How the heck do you actually measure everything so that the balance point is 9-15% front-of-center anyway? :dontknow:
thanks for all the good info. i did the bathroom scale method too. if i ever get
my trailer, i can get it set up.:banghead:
Sorry but I need to correct this. All trailer manufacturers recommend 12-15% of the load be on the hitch not 30%. A maximum of 15%! More
weight or less weight will have consequences when towing. I am speaking from over 500,000 miles of trailer towing from RV, stock trailers, Big rigs
and even the BRP and Powersports trailers.
Jack