Ball weight....
I'm an engineer, I design stuff too, not just manage people. I also weld and build things out of steel on a weekly basis. I deal with, design and built steel products that carry oftentimes tens, and sometimes hundreds of tonnes under dynamic loading.
I have seen towbars that I wouldn't put more than a 100-200kg static load on (when driving that could easily triple or quadruple in an emergency). But a lot of towbars are, from an engineering perspective, very "strong".
The ball weight thing is less about towbar strength, and a lot more to do with stability, and the tow vehicles ability to take the extra weight so far behind the rear axle without causing damage or playing havoc with the suspension, brakes and steering.. And there's a whole other can of worms.... as the tow vehicle varies so much in weight, height, length, centre of gravity, spring rate, damping rate, not to mention the lever arms that everything is loaded on. Once again, the laws here are founded upon some rule of thumb guesses that roughly cover all bases in a very generalised way, and its for this reason that at no point can you automatically assess the actual safety of towing a particular trailer with a particular vehicle, based purely on whether the ball weight is 10% of the trailer mass.
I like vans for towing, especially the transporters. Engine all the way up the front, hard load carrying rear springs, rear axle close to the back of the vehicle all mean minimised impact from whatever ball load there is. Passenger vehicles are never as good.
'07 Touareg V6 TDI with air suspension
'98 Mk3 Cabriolet 2.0 8V
'99 A4 Quattro 1.8T
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