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McGruff38's avatar
McGruff38
Explorer
Dec 01, 2017

Looking for a used motorhome to tow 7000 lbs.

I currently have a 1990 Fleetwood Flair 26, with a Ford 460 Gas motor and 3 speed transmission. The original hitch was rated at 3500lbs, and 500 lbs tongue weight. I recently had it reinforced to support about 750lbs of tongue weight, for a trip where I was going to need to carry extra water. As it is, I have in the past towed my boat (~5000 lbs) in a pinch, which was too much by far. Now, pulling my sand rail/trailer (about 3500 lbs), Is beginning to worry me. So, Im looking for something more capable. Eventually I would like to have an enclosed trailer/sand rail/bikes, and be about ~7000 lbs as my max. I have been looking a DP between about $15k-30k and seeing 34-40 foot models from about 1998-2002 in that price range (coachmans, and Gulf Streams mostly). My questions are: should I consider another gas motor, or stick to the DP knowing that towing will take place on most trips? Tow ratings/capacity are pretty tough to find online, what should I expect to see? aside from the motor and trans, what should I be looking for to make towing more comfortable overall? Is air ride suspension in all DP, or is it an upgrade? Ive never driven an air ride vehicle, how does it compare to a vehicle on springs? Finally, is the any erra specific things that changed or were trends I might want to look for or avoid around 1998-2002?
  • It depends on your needs. Ford increased the E-450 chassis to 22,000# GCWR with 14,500# GVWR. If you do the math that means you have a 7,500# tow rating. The drawback is many of these units only had 5,000# hitches. The reason for this is due to the frame rail extensions. You can have a sub frame beef-up done that will bolt to the Ford factory frame to upgrade the hitch and still be legal. The drawback is you still only have a 31' or possibly a 32' Class C. There are no Class A gas coaches anymore that can tow over 5K that I know of. That would mean you are into a DP or Super C. There are quite a few Super C units that can tow that much as well as DP units. You do need to work out the GCWR vs the GVWR. I.e. you subtract the actual weight from the GCWR and that is what you can tow. Most coach manufacturers do not provide the ability to be at your GVWR and still tow at the maximum GCWR. You sacrifice vehicle weigh to gain tow rating. There are exceptions in some of the Dynamax, and Newell coaches but in general that is what you will be working with. It can be done and with a diesel engine it will last much longer.
  • my buddy just bought a 30-ft class C gasser which he says has an 8000-lb tow rating



    what year model C class had such?
  • my buddy just bought a 30-ft class C gasser which he says has an 8000-lb tow rating but that's the only gasser moho I've seen that has a tow rating of more than 5000-lbs. keep in mind that, in general, the maximum amount of weight you can safely tow will be the lesser of the following:

    - the GCWR (gross combination weight rating) of the MH minus the actual weight of the MH as it is loaded for travel (includes fuel, fresh water, food, clothing, people, pets, supplies, etc.)

    - the weight rating of your tow bar

    - the weight rating of your hitch

    this is why it's vital to know what your MH weighs as it is loaded and configure for travel before choosing a toad. Your MH will not collapse if it is overloaded but you will experience handling issues as well as longer braking distances and accelerated wear on suspension, brakes, steering, etc.

    good luck.