Hello All,
I went to fit a 3.5 Tonne tow ball to my vehicle. I found that the tow ball nut is tapered. The nut is 32.5 mm and only fits "tow ball nut spanners" one way. They should also be torqued to 250 Nm.
According to an online conversion a 32.5 mm socket is 1 inch and 4/16ths; accessed 26th April 2020 
Conversion mm to inch and inch to mm with fraction
This may convert down to 1-1/4 inch socket. 
This I learnt from experience:
I only have a 32 mm and a 33 mm socket, and these are impact sockets
I have two torque wrenches - neither of them el-cheapos and they both only go up to 200 Nm
There is no ability for tow ball nut spanners to read torque
There is no notification which way the taper should go? Is it thickest side to the tow tongue? Or is it the thinnest side of the taper to the tow tongue?
The car parts supplier I went to only has on stock torque wrenches that go up to 200 Nm.
 I found only one supplier of 32.5 mm sockets on eBay and that was available in England. The Imperial version is more readily available at 1-1/4 inch in Australia.
So how many people buy the specialist Tow ball nut spanner and have a guess what the torque setting is? Or they grab a big shifting spanner, or a set of stillsons. To the extent that there may be more non-manufacturer's specification towballs fitted travelling on the road then there is up to specification ones.
So off I go with special tow ball nut spanner in hand to have a guess about taper directions - my guess is thicker to tongue, and what I can crank out on a cheap single purpose pressed spanner. This will have to last until I can take the tow ball into a specialist to see if they have a torque wrench that goes up to 250 Nm and has a 32.5 mm socket and get them to test my work.
Next time I follow someone towing a trailer I will wonder how close to manufacturer's specifications their towball is fitted to?
P.S. I now have a 350 Nm torque wrench and a 1-1/4 inch deep socket on their way via Australia Post. 
Kind regards
Lionel
 
			
		
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