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Hitching up a Trailer by Yourself

Here are some products to help you tackle hitching up your trailer as a one-person task.

By Randy Scott

July 1, 2006

Unless you have the uncanny ability of Harry Potter, hitching up your trailer without help can be a frustrating experience. To onlookers, you look like the Keystone Cop of Towing as you repeatedly climb in and out of your vehicle, making minute adjustments in steering and backing, sometimes pulling forward to start all over, or going so far back that you dent your license plate or bumper.

It doesn't have to be that way.

There are a slew of aftermarket products that take the hassle out of solo hookups, saving both time and frustration ... not to mention embarrassment.

truck_traileringOne such aid is the Swivel Cushion Hitch from Schuck. With this special receiver hitch, all you need to do is get relatively close to the trailer hitch. If you're a bit forward or to the side it doesn't matter, because the hitch's tongue and hitch ball telescope out seven inches and swivel 60 degrees (or 12 inches side to side), so you can hook up even when you're not perfectly aligned. After hookup, you simply back up the tow vehicle to engage a self-adjusting cam latch to lock everything in place. Another benefit of this hitch is that it has injection-molded urethane cushions to absorb end thrust shock, which takes the harsh clunking out of towing when you start and stop. The Swivel Cushion Hitch costs $300 to $400, depending on the weight-capacity model purchased. 800/824-9580, www.schuckhitches.com.

Keeper Corp.'s SpeedHitch is another adjustable hitch, but it doesn't have the integrated cushions that are found on Schuck's hitch. This unit swivels 180 degrees and telescopes a full 12 inches for hassle-free close-enough hookups. It comes with either 4-inch or 6-inch reversible drops, fits standard class III and IV receivers, and is rated for 7,500 pounds gross trailer weight. The SpeedHitch costs about $140. 860/456-4151, www.keepercorp.com.

One of the least-expensive aids for solo hookups is the use of rod markers. One rod goes on the vehicle's ballmount, and the other goes over the trailer's hitch socket. This allows you to visually align your hitch and trailer for an easier hookup. Several manufacturers offer versions of this type of hitching aid. Valley Industries' new Hitch Aligner is one example. It features two fluorescent balls mounted atop telescoping rods with heavy-duty magnets at the bottom. When the balls touch, the trailer is ready to hitch up. The rods extend up to 42 inches for an unobstructed view and collapse to 13-1/2 inches for convenient storage. Prices start at about $30. 800/344-3112, www.valleyindustries.com.

Align-Quik's Hitching Guides is a similar product, but has angled bases that make strategic rod placement easier. The fluorescent orange rods telescope from 30 inches to 44 inches. However, they also come with optional battery-powered Lite-Tips that illuminate for nighttime hookups, as well as 10-inch extenders that increase rod height to 54 inches. The base Hitching Guides cost $20, the Lite-Tips cost $10 and the extenders run $4. 877/812-0272, www.garage-toys.com.

Another clever, yet simple, technique for easy solo hookups is the use of mirrors. Camping World's FastHitch Mirror positions so that you can see the hitchball from the driver's seat. The FastHitch Mirror has brackets that attach to a pickup truck's tailgate, or uses suction cups, which are included, to mount on the rear of virtually any vehicle. The mirror is 9 inches in diameter and is convex to provide a broad field of vision that permits you to see when the hitchball is beneath the trailer's hitch coupler. When not in use, the 1.3-pound FastHitch Mirror folds compactly for storage. It costs $30. 888/626-7576, www.CampingWorld.com.

Also worth considering are what some call the hitch-by-Braille products, where the trailer tongue comes in contact with flared metal guides that direct it over the hitchball. The Hitch Aligner is one such product. It's a V-shaped metal guide that fastens between the hitchball and your existing hitchball mount. The 1/4-inch steel V-plate funnels the trailer coupler directly over the hitchball. When not in use, the V-plate reverses out of the way. The only drawback to this type of product is that the plates hide the license plate on bumper-type hitches. With frame-mounted receiver hitches, however, this generally isn't a problem. The Hitch Aligner is powder-coated black, which might scratch off after repeated scrapes with the trailer. It sells for $33. 937/538-0650, www.hitchaligner.com.

hitch_alignerDuraSafe's Couple-Mate Self-Aligning Trailer Hitch Finder, or Couple-Mate for short, is similar to the Hitch Aligner. The Couple-Mate won the 2004 NMMA Product Innovation Award at MAATS. Its patented two-piece design consists of a mounting bracket that goes between the hitchball and hitchball mount, and V-shaped "guide wings" that slip into a slot on the mounting bracket for quick attachment and removal. Couple-Mate is made of double-dipped, zinc-plated steel and is silver in appearance so it won't show scratches as much as painted or color-coated models. A word of caution about any hitch-aligning device that comes in contact with the trailer: If your trailer jack doesn't set on a wheel, ramming the trailer tongue too hard with the vehicle's hitch could cause the jack stand to bend. Finesse is the key. DuraSafe doesn't sell the Couple-Mate direct, but it's available at West Marine, BoatU.S., Overton's and other boat and fishing supply stores. It sells for approximately $45. 800/334-6541, www.westmarine.com.

Another hitch-by-Braille product is Hitch 'n Go. Unlike other products that merely align the trailer coupler over the hitchball, this nifty system actually connects the trailer to the tow rig while you stay in the driver's seat. This unique product attaches the hitchball upside down to the trailer tongue. As you back up the tow vehicle, the hitchball rides up a V-ramp inserted into the vehicle's receiver and drops into an integrated hitchball socket. After it drops in, simply pull forward slightly and a locking lever and safety pin lock the hitchball in place. To unhook the trailer, you merely remove the safety pin and lift the locking lever. The system has a towing capacity of 3,500 to 5,000 pounds, depending on your product selection. An optional Adjustable Hitch allows you up to 6 inches of vertical positioning. The Hitch 'n Go kit costs from $321 to $340. 877/448-2446, www.hitch-n-go.com.

hindsight_monitorOne of the best products for solo hookups is a camera mounted on the rear of the tow vehicle that permits you to visualize your backup via a monitor in the cab. Vizualogic's Hindsight C-1000 Vehicle Back-Up System does just that. It can be installed on any vehicle and provides the driver a full rearview, wide-angle backup image on a 3 1/2-inch monitor in the cab. The camera provides a 120-degree viewing angle that not only allows you to visually line up with the trailer coupler, but also eliminates blind spots, which is a huge safety factor when it comes to avoiding objects behind the vehicle. The Hindsight C-1000 system costs $499. 800/624-7960, www.vizualogic.com.


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