rrlund
Well-known Member
Is it normal to need an extra ground wire between a pickup and trailer? I took the box off my pickup this week and put a flatbed on it. I had to disconnect the trailer plug wiring to get it out of the bumper, then hooked it back up and put it through a hole in the back of the flatbed. I tested it with a test light, hooked the clip of the test light to the neutral pin, touched the tip to each of the other pins and they all worked like they should.
I backed up in front of the gooseneck livestock trailer and plugged it in. None of the lights worked. I didn't want to crank it all the way down on the ball to see if grounding it that way would light them up, so I hooked the jumper cables to the truck hitch and the trailer. Everything lit up and worked. In all honesty, I never tried just plugging the trailer in without being hooked on when I still had the old box on the trailer, so I don't know if this is a new thing. Do I need to hook up ground wires with a plug so I can just ground it when I hook on, or do they all just ground through the ball? Why wouldn't the neutral pin in the plug do it?
I backed up in front of the gooseneck livestock trailer and plugged it in. None of the lights worked. I didn't want to crank it all the way down on the ball to see if grounding it that way would light them up, so I hooked the jumper cables to the truck hitch and the trailer. Everything lit up and worked. In all honesty, I never tried just plugging the trailer in without being hooked on when I still had the old box on the trailer, so I don't know if this is a new thing. Do I need to hook up ground wires with a plug so I can just ground it when I hook on, or do they all just ground through the ball? Why wouldn't the neutral pin in the plug do it?