tjandrews
New Member
- Joined
- March 29, 2013
- Messages
- 3
- Reaction score
- 0
- City, State
- Central New York
- Year, Model & Trim Level
- 98 Explorer XLT
Bought a 98 Explorer XLT last September, in pristine condition for its age, at least for Central NY. No rust to speak of, anywhere.
I've volunteered to crew at the local hot air balloon festival each June for nearly 20 years. It's possible that I will be asked if my Explorer could be used as one of the anchors for tethered balloon rides. (Each balloon is required to be tethered at three points for tethered rides.) It's happened before - three years ago we used my Dodge Stratus's Class 1 trailer hitch as one of the tie-downs for not one but TWO balloons, with no ill effects. (The other anchors were a conveniently-positioned 10-inch tree trunk, each of the balloonists' chase vehicles, and a half-ton pickup.)
My Explorer doesn't have a receiver hitch - it just has the step bumper. But the bumper is factory-rated as a Class 2 hitch. I've been underneath, and to my 63-year-old farmer eyes it looks plenty strong enough for at least one balloon, if not two, as long as I use a decent clevis to tie off to, and as long as the balloon pilot has sense enough to shut down if the wind comes up. (I won't do it for a pilot I don't trust.)
What do you guys think?
I've volunteered to crew at the local hot air balloon festival each June for nearly 20 years. It's possible that I will be asked if my Explorer could be used as one of the anchors for tethered balloon rides. (Each balloon is required to be tethered at three points for tethered rides.) It's happened before - three years ago we used my Dodge Stratus's Class 1 trailer hitch as one of the tie-downs for not one but TWO balloons, with no ill effects. (The other anchors were a conveniently-positioned 10-inch tree trunk, each of the balloonists' chase vehicles, and a half-ton pickup.)
My Explorer doesn't have a receiver hitch - it just has the step bumper. But the bumper is factory-rated as a Class 2 hitch. I've been underneath, and to my 63-year-old farmer eyes it looks plenty strong enough for at least one balloon, if not two, as long as I use a decent clevis to tie off to, and as long as the balloon pilot has sense enough to shut down if the wind comes up. (I won't do it for a pilot I don't trust.)
What do you guys think?