Hardest trailer ever to back up is a single empty jetski trailer! Doesn't show up in the mirrors until it is about 30 degrees out of line, and because of the extremely short tongue, there is no hope of recovering it at that point. The only positive is that it is light enough you can go pick the back of the trailer up if need be!
Tow foot-itis does cure the short trailer problem in time.
Hardest trailer ever to back up is a single empty jetski trailer! Doesn't show up in the mirrors until it is about 30 degrees out of line, and because of the extremely short tongue, there is no hope of recovering it at that point. The only positive is that it is light enough you can go pick the back of the trailer up if need be!
My empty drift boat trailer must be close to a jet ski for length/width and I agree.......it's a SOB to back up with mirrors. Can't see the darn thing unless I weave back and forth which makes it appear I've been drinking and we all know that fishermen never drink.
I hated using mirrors for backing a trailer until I bought my cargo trailer. Just like over the semi drivers, you cannot see looking over your shoulder since the big box back there blocks your view so I had to use the mirrors. It doesn't take long to realize backing is absolutely the same using mirrors as looking over your shoulder. Steer right to make the trailer go left and vice versa. The problem a lot of folks have when backing a trailer is that they tend to either wait too long to correct or they feel they immediately need to start sawing at the wheel the minute they begin to back up. I can pull up just past my driveway, back into the driveway and into my garage (tall door) without stopping or pulling forward half a dozen times. You can also try backing to the left (drivers side) rather than blind backing (passenger side) until you get the hang of it. I do agree that a small and very short trailer is harder to back than a bigger/longer unit and it stands to reason due to the "physics" involved..