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Climbing steep grades...

Mrgunguy
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 30’ 2003 Four Winds class C with the 6L, 8cyl Vortec engine. I’m planning on pulling a 2003 Jeep TJ (4cyl, straight drive) and had a question or two.

I’ve noticed that when I’m climbing steep grades (or even not so steep grades) the engine has a tendency to begin heating up. I’ve been told that this is due, in part, to the overdrive and if I simply kick it down to 3rd gear I should be able to mitigate some of that heating. So far, so good. It does heat up some but not as quickly as it used to and it has not left me on the side of the road with a smoldering engine.

Now I would like to flat tow a small Jeep so that I can run about when I get to where I’m going but I’m afraid that this will be too much and the coach will overheat when I’m 1,500 miles away from home and on the side of a mountain. Is there something that I should be taking into consideration or doing differently? We would like to go to see Yellowstone this year and, at an elevation of 5K+ feet, I’m feeling anxious over having to climb an awful lot of asphalt.

Any help or advice would be gratefully accepted.
40 REPLIES 40

lane_hog
Explorer II
Explorer II
We just finished a Yellowstone run towing our Honda van. Coolant temps averaged 195F, running up to 208F on extended uphill grades. Temps via DashCommand and our OBD2 wifi reader...
  • 2019 Grand Design 29TBS (had a Winnebago and 3x Jayco owner)
  • 2016 F-150 3.5L MaxTow (had Ram 2500 CTD, Dodge Durango)
  • 130W solar and 2005 Honda EU2000i twins that just won't quit

rjstractor
Nomad
Nomad
FunTwoDrv wrote:
Okay, I40 at Black MT is a 5 mile 6% grade. I run in the right lane and pretty much stay with the trucks and some other RV's. Of course we hit it at 60 or so and then down to 45mph for most of the way. I do let it trail off the last half mile or so just because I don't like to push it as long as I'm not impeding traffic. So, I don't attempt to run up it, or any other long grade, at full throttle. We'm about 18.6k lbs so, below our GCWR of 20K.
No heating problems thus far and we've been from NC to WA and everywhere in between.
Cheers,
Gary


Ok that makes more sense, you are choosing to back off the throttle. 45 mph on a 6% grade at that weight sounds about right.
2017 VW Golf Alltrack
2000 Ford F250 7.3

ppine
Explorer II
Explorer II
If 25 mph is the best you can do on a 6% grade, that is pretty good evidence you are carrying too much weight.

5000 feet is nothing. My house is higher than that. Fuel injection is a huge improvement compared to the old carburetors and vapor lock problems.

Stay out of Canada if you have difficulty with 6 % grades. They have main highways with 11-12% grades.

FunTwoDrv
Explorer
Explorer
Okay, I40 at Black MT is a 5 mile 6% grade. I run in the right lane and pretty much stay with the trucks and some other RV's. Of course we hit it at 60 or so and then down to 45mph for most of the way. I do let it trail off the last half mile or so just because I don't like to push it as long as I'm not impeding traffic. So, I don't attempt to run up it, or any other long grade, at full throttle. We'm about 18.6k lbs so, below our GCWR of 20K.
No heating problems thus far and we've been from NC to WA and everywhere in between.
Cheers,
Gary

Desert_Captain
Explorer III
Explorer III
"HUH??? Have you driven I-17 from Phoenix to Flagstaff or Flagstaff to Phoenix??? I've been down to 15mph or lower behind heavy trucks when passing was impossible on that route. If you can live with the reduced speed on a hard climb and your engine and transmission is not overheating, and you're running within weight limits, YOU ARE NOT OVERLOADED AND YOUR TOAD IS JUST FINE. You do not have to fly up steep hills at 70mph.

Frankly, someone having fun following me up a steep hill does not concern me at all. I will be in the right lane, obeying the local and state laws. and if my speed bothers you, go around. My job is not to keep someone behind me having fun."



I have driven those routes dozens of times and have NEVER seen anyone down to 15 mph. I do see trucks chugging along at 35 with their flashers on and yes passing them is a PITA. Driving far slower than the flow of traffic is not only dangerous, rude and foolish it is also illegal. No one said you have to "fly up steep hills at 70".

If you are going 15 - 25 you are not obeying the local and state laws or the feds for that matter and the interstates are their jurisdiction. I stand by my opinion that if you are only able to do 25 mph on a 6 percent grade something is wrong. You are correct that your job is not to keep someone behind you having fun...Your job is to drive safely. Sorry you don 't get that.

As always... opinions and YMMV.

:R

rjstractor
Nomad
Nomad
FunTwoDrv wrote:
For reference, we pull a 4500# Wrangler with a 6.0, 6sp, 32' C. running up Black Mountain on I40, our temp creeps up as you mentioned. I run with the "Tow/Haul" mode turned on and the trans does it's thing with downshifting. We are around 25mph when we reach the top. The Scangage shows water temp a touch lower than the instrument cluster by 5 or so degrees. I added another external trans cooler to aid in controlling those temperatures as we travel the Rockies as well with this setup.
Gary


I would wonder if you were running full throttle (or were able to) with those slow speeds on a 5-6% grade. I used to have an older, less powerful (just 265 hp) Ford E450 running about 1500 less GCW than your rig, and I could maintain a solid 45 mph on a 6% grade regardless of outside temperatures. I could run said 6% grade in high-90 degree temperatures at full throttle without overheating. If you are forced to back off the throttle to avoid overheating I would submit that you have issues with your cooling system. Then again, it could be just the drivetrain, my 2005 Chevy 2500HD would heat up when pulling hard in hot weather.
2017 VW Golf Alltrack
2000 Ford F250 7.3

pigman1
Explorer
Explorer
Desert Captain wrote:
"We are around 25mph when we reach the top."

IMHO:

If the best you can do on a 6 percent grade on the interstate is 25 mph you have waaaay too much Toad and/or not nearly enough power for the load you are expecting it to haul.
Even heavily loaded 18 wheelers do better than that.

Class C's over 30' tend to have very little payload available and adding a Toad that is very close to your max towing capability is a recipe for disaster. You may be FunTwoDrv but probably are not much fun to follow.

As always... Opinions and YMMV.

:E
HUH??? Have you driven I-17 from Phoenix to Flagstaff or Flagstaff to Phoenix??? I've been down to 15mph or lower behind heavy trucks when passing was impossible on that route. If you can live with the reduced speed on a hard climb and your engine and transmission is not overheating, and you're running within weight limits, YOU ARE NOT OVERLOADED AND YOUR TOAD IS JUST FINE. You do not have to fly up steep hills at 70mph.

Frankly, someone having fun following me up a steep hill does not concern me at all. I will be in the right lane, obeying the local and state laws. and if my speed bothers you, go around. My job is not to keep someone behind me having fun.
Pigman & Piglady
2013 Tiffin Allegro Bus 43' QGP
2011 Chevy Silverado 1500
SMI Air Force One toad brake
Street Atlas USA Plus

azdryheat
Explorer
Explorer
Have you weighed your Class C and Jeep? Are you sure you're not over weight?
2013 Chevy 3500HD CC dually
2014 Voltage 3600 toy hauler
2019 RZR 1000XP TRE

Desert_Captain
Explorer III
Explorer III
"We are around 25mph when we reach the top."

IMHO:

If the best you can do on a 6 percent grade on the interstate is 25 mph you have waaaay too much Toad and/or not nearly enough power for the load you are expecting it to haul.
Even heavily loaded 18 wheelers do better than that.

Class C's over 30' tend to have very little payload available and adding a Toad that is very close to your max towing capability is a recipe for disaster. You may be FunTwoDrv but probably are not much fun to follow.

As always... Opinions and YMMV.

:E

FunTwoDrv
Explorer
Explorer
For reference, we pull a 4500# Wrangler with a 6.0, 6sp, 32' C. running up Black Mountain on I40, our temp creeps up as you mentioned. I run with the "Tow/Haul" mode turned on and the trans does it's thing with downshifting. We are around 25mph when we reach the top. The Scangage shows water temp a touch lower than the instrument cluster by 5 or so degrees. I added another external trans cooler to aid in controlling those temperatures as we travel the Rockies as well with this setup.
Gary

carringb
Explorer
Explorer
Hopefully the cooling system was previously flushed completely. If not, you might be suffering Death by Dex-Cool. Once it ages out (10 years) or gets exposed to oxygen from a leak, it'll start to coagulate, and the pH drops which starts corroding things.

The good news is that it hasn't completely overheated, so doing a full-flush now should get all the old stuff out, and adding a chemical flush will remove any of the "Tapioca" that forms when it starts breaking down.

Do beware that the first generation 6.0 in the Chevy chassis only had a 16,000 GCWR, same as the vans. When Workhorse came out with their version of the 4500 chassis, with the workhorse badge, they bumped it up to 17,600 pounds. Workhorse did some engineering to upgrade components for the upgraded GVWR, but I don't know if anything was changed in the cooling system to allow for the higher GCWR. The 20,000 GCWR did not come out until the 6L80/85e was introduced.

IAMICHABOD - Do you happen to have the full list of upgrades Workhorse did? If they upgraded any of the cooling, it would be easy to add those items. And if they didn't do anything, I think you can assume the Workhorse GCWR as-is.
2000 Ford E450 V10 VAN! 450,000+ miles
2014 ORV really big trailer
2015 Ford Focus ST

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
I would certainly add a transmission cooler. I lost a tranny to over heating because the radiator was plugged. At that time the transmission radiator was internal to the main radiator.
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

Mrgunguy
Explorer
Explorer
bobndot wrote:
Mrgunguy wrote:
I’m afraid that this will be too much and the coach will overheat when I’m 1,500 miles away from home and on the side of a mountain.


2003 ? Have you checked with a radiator shop ?

I had the same symptoms as you are having while towing even on 'not so steep' hills.

The shop pulled my radiator out and I believe they boiled it, pressure tested it and replaced it. They said it had a degree of crud inside that restricted flow.


I’m pretty sure that’s what my mechanic is going to tell me. When I bought it five years ago I took it to the Chevy dealer locally, and they charged me as much as they reasonably could for... I’m not 100% sure what. I plan on taking it to my own mechanic (who says he doesn’t work on RVs but I bet I c an talk him into it) and I know he will do everything he can to make it right. He actually owns a rig similar to mine and I’m betting he will treat it as his own. He will also be familiar with ways to beef up EVERYTHING, as is his way.

But this I won’t do until I drive it and can give him more accurate and relevant information. I’m feeling a short camping trip in my future. 😄

bobndot
Explorer II
Explorer II
Mrgunguy wrote:
I’m afraid that this will be too much and the coach will overheat when I’m 1,500 miles away from home and on the side of a mountain.


2003 ? Have you checked with a radiator shop ?

I had the same symptoms as you are having while towing even on 'not so steep' hills.

The shop pulled my radiator out and I believe they boiled it, pressure tested it and replaced it. They said it had a degree of crud inside that restricted flow.