Few decisions cost RV owners more money than upgrading a tow vehicle unnecessarily.
A common scenario plays out every year across North America:
An RV owner experiences trailer sway.
They feel instability on the highway.
Crosswinds make towing stressful.
Passing semi-trucks requires both hands on the wheel.
The immediate conclusion?
"I need a bigger truck."
But what if the truck isn't actually the problem?
What if the real issue is the hitch connecting the truck and trailer?
Before spending tens of thousands of dollars on a new tow vehicle, it's important to understand what causes trailer sway and which upgrade delivers the greatest improvement in towing stability.
When towing feels unstable, most drivers naturally blame the tow vehicle.
After all, the truck is what they are sitting in.
It's what they feel moving.
It's what they are steering.
But instability often originates somewhere else entirely.
Many RV owners upgrade from:
Only to discover that trailer sway still exists.
The trailer may feel slightly better.
But the root cause remains.
The assumption is understandable.
Larger trucks are heavier.
They have longer wheelbases.
They often have stronger suspension systems.
All of these factors can improve towing performance.
But improvement is not the same thing as elimination.
When sway occurs, drivers often feel:
These sensations make it seem like the truck is struggling.
In reality, the trailer may be creating leverage forces that no truck can completely eliminate.
A larger truck can mask sway.
It does not necessarily prevent sway.
The trailer remains connected at the same location.
The trailer still pivots behind the rear axle.
The same leverage still exists.
Physics doesn't care whether the tow vehicle weighs 5,000 pounds or 9,000 pounds.
The geometry remains unchanged.
To understand which upgrade should come first, it's important to understand what causes sway in the first place.
Most conventional travel trailers pivot on a hitch ball located behind the tow vehicle's rear axle.
This creates a lever arm.
When outside forces act on the trailer, that leverage transfers force to the tow vehicle.
Those forces can come from:
The result is trailer sway.
The farther the pivot point sits behind the rear axle, the more leverage exists.
More leverage means greater instability.
This is why fifth-wheel trailers generally feel more stable.
Their pivot point is located near the truck's rear axle.
The leverage is dramatically reduced.
A larger truck certainly offers benefits.
But it is important to understand what those benefits are—and what they are not.
A bigger truck may provide:
These are valuable improvements.
What a bigger truck does not change is the hitch geometry.
The trailer still pivots at the hitch ball.
The leverage still exists.
The trailer still has the potential to sway.
A larger truck may resist those forces more effectively, but it does not eliminate them.
This is where the conversation changes.
Unlike a truck upgrade, a hitch upgrade can directly address the source of trailer instability.
The root cause of trailer sway is not necessarily truck size.
It is often the relationship between:
Changing that relationship changes how forces move through the towing system.
A properly engineered hitch can eliminate the leverage that creates sway.
Instead of simply resisting trailer movement, it can prevent the conditions that allow sway to develop.
That distinction is enormous.
Let's compare typical costs.
| Upgrade | Typical Cost |
| New Heavy-Duty Truck | $60,000 - $90,000+ |
| Truck Suspension Upgrades | $1,000 - $5,000 |
| Airbags & Accessories | $500 - $3,000 |
| ProPride 3P® Hitch | Fraction of a new truck purchase |
For many RV owners, the hitch upgrade provides the largest improvement in towing confidence per dollar spent.
Many experienced RV owners follow a similar path:
The common realization?
The hitch solved the problem that the truck could only partially mask.
Talk to enough experienced RV travelers and you'll hear a familiar statement:
"The bigger truck helped, but the hitch changed everything."
Why?
Because stability begins at the connection point between truck and trailer.
If that connection allows sway-producing leverage, even the best truck can only compensate so much.
The ProPride 3P® was specifically engineered to address the geometry problem behind trailer sway.
The ProPride 3P® uses Pivot Point Projection™ (3P) technology.
Its converging-link design projects the effective pivot point forward toward the rear axle of the tow vehicle.
This dramatically reduces the leverage that causes trailer sway.
Unlike friction-based systems that react after sway begins, the ProPride 3P® prevents sway from developing in the first place.
Because the pivot point is effectively moved forward, many owners describe the towing experience as feeling similar to a fifth wheel.
Benefits commonly reported include:
This article is not suggesting truck upgrades are unnecessary.
Sometimes they absolutely are.
A larger truck may be required if:
In these situations, upgrading the truck is essential.
But if your truck is already properly rated, the hitch may be the upgrade that delivers the biggest improvement in stability.
You may benefit more from a hitch upgrade if:
These symptoms often point toward hitch geometry rather than vehicle capability.
Not necessarily. A larger truck may reduce how sway feels, but it does not change the hitch geometry that creates sway.
Trailer sway occurs when external forces create leverage around the hitch pivot point behind the rear axle.
In most cases, yes. A premium hitch costs a fraction of replacing a tow vehicle.
The ProPride 3P® uses Pivot Point Projection™ technology to eliminate sway-producing leverage rather than relying on friction to control sway.
When properly matched and configured, the ProPride 3P® is designed to provide stability while maintaining proper weight distribution.
Some do for payload or towing-capacity reasons, but many find that the hitch solves the instability issues they initially blamed on their truck.
If your trailer feels unstable, the instinct to buy a bigger truck is understandable.
But before making a major vehicle purchase, it's worth asking a simple question:
Is the truck really the problem?
For many RV owners, the answer is no.
Trailer sway is fundamentally a geometry problem, not simply a weight problem.
A larger truck may reduce the symptoms.
A properly engineered hitch can address the cause.
The ProPride 3P® was designed around that principle. By using Pivot Point Projection™ technology to eliminate sway-producing leverage, it provides a level of towing stability that many owners spend years searching for through truck upgrades alone.
For RV owners who are already within their vehicle's towing ratings, upgrading the hitch first may be the smartest investment they can make—and one that saves thousands of dollars while delivering a safer, more confident towing experience.