crisscrossed under the trailer couple
Your hitch should have slots designated for the chains.
If the trailer hitch should come uncoupled, the safety chains keep the trailer connected to the towing vehicle. When attached PROPERLY, they will also prevent the tongue of the trailer from digging into the road surface if it should disconnect. Cross the chains left to right, and right to left UNDER the tongue of the trailer.
Your hitch should have slots designated for the chains.
The chains connect to a loop on either side of the ball hitch. One on each side. The chains should not be so tight that when the vehicle turns the chain gets tight and restricts the turn before the trailer starts to turn. The chain is more for safety should the trailer get of the ball.
They should crisscross each other beneath the ball hitch, thus forming a cradle in case the ball and tongue should separate. The idea here is to keep the towing vehicle and the trailer as one unit. Never go anywhere without those chains attached.
Yes. The purpose of safety chains is to keep the trailer connected to your vehicle in the event it comes off the hitch ball. If you were to not cross them, if the trailer were to come off, it would be dragging on the ground, and cause much much more damage than if they were crossed and caught the trailer.Answer: YES, YES, YES.....So, the last person had the correct answer, but the ABSOLUTE wrong reasoning.Ok, so the answer is YES, you absolutely should have your chains crossed, but contrary to popular belief, the reason for trailer chains is not to keep your trailer from being damaged, it is to prevent the trailer from veering into traffic or into pedestrians on a curb and potentially killing someone in the event your trailer detaches from your hitch. By crossing your chains, you create cross tension forcing the trailer to follow your vehicle until you can bring your vehicle to a controlled stop. If you do not cross your chains, the trailer is free to sway back and forth, potentially with enough force to cause an accident of epic proportions. PLEASE CROSS YOUR CHAINS, straight chains are dangerous to you and those on the road with you.
haha good question i am wondering the same thing let me no if you find out Cross the chains to cradle and catch the tongue or receiver insertion bar when towing and something lets go, the chains are designed to catch and hold the towed vehicle to the tow unit..hope this helps, drive safely.
Car chains are designed to aid the motion of the car during ice and snow. Therefore, they should be attached to the drive wheels of the vehicle. In other words, front wheel drive cars need the chains attached to the front wheels.
The most important thing to note is that your rate will be affected by the vehicle to which the trailer is attached, so keep your truck in good repair.
well if the vehicle has loops to hook them to, put the hook through the loop facing upwards, because if the trailer became loose, the hooks have a higher chance of staying connected.
Make sure that the trailer wheels are chocked.
A small single axle trailer does not need brakes but be aware that your vehicle will have to stop the vehicle plus the trailer, so allow more stopping distance. A double axle trailer needs trailer brakes if you are carrying a heavy load of any kind at all.