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The above gauge is now £8.19 reduced from £18.99 , 57% reduction on the Big River website, if anybody is looking for one.
We have the Milenco calibrated gauge that we will be selling and it can weigh nose weight up to 400kg. I wonder how accurate the £8 Maypole one is?The above gauge is now £8.19 reduced from £18.99 , 57% reduction on the Big River website, if anybody is looking for one.
Can the Milenco and Maypole be used on both SA and TA?We have the Milenco calibrated gauge that we will be selling and it can weigh nose weight up to 400kg. I wonder how accurate the £8 Maypole one is?
Ours could probably could be used for both? The normal Milenco only read up to 120kg, but on the Buccaneer the nose weight could be up to 150kg. We found 140kg to be ideal for us.Can the Milenco and Maypole be used on both SA and TA?
My Reich is designed for TA . They do a different model for SA.
I can’t recall the exact reasons but way back the difference was discussed. There is a difference and this is reflected by Reich producing different gauges for the SA and TA.Ours could probably could be used for both? The normal Milenco only read up to 120kg, but on the Buccaneer the nose weight could be up to 150kg. We found 140kg to be ideal for us.
Because the Reich system uses a device that clips to the cars tow ball, it raises the trailers tow hitch above the true towing height, which affects the nose load the trailer will produce. Consequently to get the device to display a more accurate reading, the device has to incorporate some either computational correction factor or a mechanical compensation system.I can’t recall the exact reasons but way back the difference was discussed. There is a difference and this is reflected by Reich producing different gauges for the SA and TA.
I don’t know about the Maypole or Milenco
Whilst not bothering about 1-2 kg over my cars’ nose weight limits I wouldn’t consider 10kg over to be acceptable. Although all my caravans were 100kg maximum. But doesn’t it relate to the car’s maximum and the caravan’s maximum. If the car is 70kg going to 80kg isnt such a good idea. But if the car and caravan are like your Jeep/Bucanner combination then 10 kg is a much smaller percentage overshoot.Does anyone really worry whether they are 1 or even 10kg over the towball limit? When travelling the nose weight on the towball will definitely exceed 100kg limit at times.
Not sure how you can say they are static weights when they will vary by a huge amount. Is there actually an offence for exceeding the maximum weight on the towball as I think, but may be wrong. the legislation refers to the weight on the rear axle of the towing vehicle? Happy to be corrected.Whilst not bothering about 1-2 kg over my cars’ nose weight limits I wouldn’t consider 10kg over to be acceptable. Although all my caravans were 100kg maximum. But doesn’t it relate to the car’s maximum and the caravan’s maximum. If the car is 70kg going to 80kg isnt such a good idea. But if the car and caravan are like your Jeep/Bucanner combination then 10 kg is a much smaller percentage overshoot.
The car and caravan noseweight limits are static limits and the car and caravan will obviously exceed them when towing but the makers will have factored in the dynamic loads in the design.
The noseweight specified for the car and caravan is a static weight. They cannot be anything else when you are setting them up can they? My second paragraph acknowledges that when towing the loads on the tow ball and hitch are dynamic loads.Not sure how you can say they are static weights when they will vary by a huge amount. Is there actually an offence for exceeding the maximum weight on the towball as I think, but may be wrong. the legislation refers to the weight on the rear axle of the towing vehicle? Happy to be corrected.