How a Weight Distribution Hitch (WDH) works.

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How a Weight Distribution Hitch (WDH) works.

To explain how a Weight Distribution Hitch (WDH) works, it helps to first understand the problem it is designed to solve: the “Teeter-Totter” effect.

Here is a breakdown of how the WDH interacts with your tow vehicle and caravan to correct this issue.


Weight Distribution Hitch (WDH)

1. The Problem: The Teeter-Totter Effect

When you lower a heavy caravan coupling onto your vehicle’s tow ball, all that weight (tongue weight) pushes down on the vehicle’s rear axle.

Because the rear axle acts as a pivot point (fulcrum), two things happen:

  1. The Rear Squats: The back of the tow vehicle creates a “sag.”

  2. The Front Lifts: The front of the tow vehicle rises up.

Why is this dangerous?


2. The Solution: How the WDH Interacts

A WDH stops the tow vehicle and the caravan from operating as two separate hinged units and forces them to act more like a single, rigid frame.

It achieves this through Spring Bars. These bars attach to the hitch head on the vehicle and are then leveraged up and chained (or bracketed) to the caravan’s A-frame.

The Wheelbarrow Analogy

The best way to visualize this interaction is to imagine a wheelbarrow:

When you lift the handles of a wheelbarrow, you aren’t removing the weight of the load; you are leveraging it. Two things happen:

  1. Some weight shifts forward onto your arms (the Tow Vehicle’s Front Axle).

  2. Some weight shifts backward onto the wheelbarrow’s wheel (the Caravan’s Axles).


3. Where does the weight go?

The WDH does not “remove” weight from the total rig; it redistributes it across all axles.

Axle Effect of WDH Result
Vehicle Front Axle Gains Weight Restores steering control, braking efficiency, and headlight aim.
Vehicle Rear Axle Loses Weight Eliminates the “sag” or squat, preventing suspension bottoming out.
Caravan Axles Gains Weight Helps the caravan track better and reduces sway.

4. The Interaction in Motion

Once the WDH is engaged, the interaction changes how the rig handles dynamic forces on the road:

Summary

Without a WDH, the weight is concentrated on the vehicle’s rear axle. With a WDH, the tension creates a lever that spreads that weight across all three sets of axles (Vehicle Front, Vehicle Rear, and Trailer).