It's a crude picture of how I checked my tongue weight, but it's how I did it.
Tongue weight should be about 15% of gross weight of your trailer and load. My Talon is about 1600 pounds and the trailer is about 800 pounds 15% of 2400 pounds is 360. I used our glass top home scale and promised to buy my wife a better light up scale if I broke this one. I put a piece of plywood on the ground with the scale on it.Then I put a rug on to smooth out the weight from the decking boards and larger wood pieces above. I use whatever is close at hand. Then I raised the jack to put all tongue weight on the coupler. With the Talon all the way forward to the front rail, I showed a weight of 396#. When I subtracted the 45# of wood stacked on the scale before the tongue weight was added, I had 349#.
I painted a mark on the trailer where my rear axle was-baseline. Then I moved the Talon backwards 2",4",& 6" and reweighed. Each 2" made it about 30# lighter.
With the Talon on my trailer all the way forward 349# TW.
Tongue weight should be about 15% of gross weight of your trailer and load. My Talon is about 1600 pounds and the trailer is about 800 pounds 15% of 2400 pounds is 360. I used our glass top home scale and promised to buy my wife a better light up scale if I broke this one. I put a piece of plywood on the ground with the scale on it.Then I put a rug on to smooth out the weight from the decking boards and larger wood pieces above. I use whatever is close at hand. Then I raised the jack to put all tongue weight on the coupler. With the Talon all the way forward to the front rail, I showed a weight of 396#. When I subtracted the 45# of wood stacked on the scale before the tongue weight was added, I had 349#.
I painted a mark on the trailer where my rear axle was-baseline. Then I moved the Talon backwards 2",4",& 6" and reweighed. Each 2" made it about 30# lighter.
With the Talon on my trailer all the way forward 349# TW.