Alko tow ball

Nov 19, 2006
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I have one of these fitted to a new towbar in readiness for delivery of a new caravan with am Alko 1300 hitch. It seems these are more bother than they are worth-need to remove paint-need to keep cleam and dry and free from grease etc. What happens if you have to be towed by a vehicle with the standard tow ball -do you have to replace friction pads each time.

Perhaps I should have stuck with an ordinary hitch?
 

JTQ

May 7, 2005
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Quote:

"Perhaps I should have stuck with an ordinary hitch?"

Well I have a Alko 2004 and find it very worth while as a stabiliser and far less hassle than using a Scott I once had.

With the 2004 you cant be towed by a vehicle with a standard ball, it has not got sufficient clearance to allow for all potential angles of articulation so would be very unsafe.

Personally not a big issue and now days many UK vehicles have either a swan neck towbar which is okay or already use an Alko anyway. So should an emergency tow be needed it would not be difficult to find an alternative tow vehicle.
 
Jul 15, 2005
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Hi Morganic,

No.

Our last two caravans have used the ALKO 1300 hitch - Eriba Triton MTPLM of 1200 kg - and it's not an issue.

Cleaning the paint / plating from the tow-ball is a once only job - about 2 minutes with 400 grade wet / dry paper

Then before you hook up, just give the tow-ball a wipe with a clean rag or a rub with a kitchen scourer if it's gone a bit rusty.

If someone else tows your caravan with a standard tow-ball, then as long as they wipe any grease off their tow-ball, then it's not an issue (aside from any physical incompatibilities). And it's not the tow-ball that needs the grease - it's the non-stabilised ALKO tow-coupling - that would soon wear out if it wasn't greased inside.

Robert
 

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