Harveyj
May 20, 2013Explorer
%#$&# salesman
While camping up at Lake Wallowa state park in Oregon, a young couple towing a new 24' Gulfstream with a Toyota Tacoma, pulled in next to us. We were visiting later and he told me that his tacoma was...
anaro wrote:.
I think both are at fault. The ultimate responsibility lies with the consumer...remember caveat emptor. That said dealerships need to stop selling tt based upon the somewhat fictional dry weight. When I bought my tt, I knew the tow max of my old armada. What I didn't understand was tongue weight, payload, gawr etc and how they pertained to me. I had dealerships leading me to believe I could tow an 8500 lb dry 34 ft tt with my armada (rated at 9100 lb and rated for 910 lb on the receiver). I knew better than to shop dry weight even though I was told by more than one salesman that gvwr didn't matter, dry weight is what you watch. I bought a tt that was under tow max by 2000 lbs loaded but over on payload. That was my fault not the dealership. I upgraded the tv. The truck dealership sold me a used F250 diesel like I asked. Again, I made a crucial mistake, I never double checked the payload sticker because it was a diesel, it can tow a pretty sizeable trailer no problem. We were thinking of a future 5er upgrade. Oops, this diesel has less than 1500 lbs available payload. No 12000 lb sabre for this truck although it is well matched to the current tt. These were mistakes on my part, not the salesmans part. The only thing I ever blame a salesman for is trying to undersell the true weight of a trailer. The tow vehicle is the responsibility of the owner.