โJul-14-2014 09:27 AM
โJul-16-2014 06:15 AM
โJul-16-2014 03:58 AM
โJul-15-2014 07:19 PM
โJul-15-2014 07:18 PM
pauldub wrote:
Since you can drive your jeep 55 mph, there should be no problems with flat towing it. Your owners manual you give you the specifics on flat towing and it should say to put the transfer case in neutral and unlock the steering wheel. If it's a auto tranny it will say to put it in park, for a manual tranny I'm guessing it says to put it in neutral.
โJul-15-2014 07:12 PM
โJul-15-2014 05:50 PM
โJul-15-2014 03:53 PM
wcjeep wrote:
The JK's have a bigger tow/haul capacity. TJ's were 2k. The shorter wheel base, weaker tranny and weaker axles are contributing factors. The straight 6 engine is great off-road. It would run out of power towing just about anything.
โJul-15-2014 02:25 PM
bshpilot wrote:Olddud wrote:
For newer Wranglers, I believe there is a separate payload capacity, that has nothing to do with towing, other than hitch weight.
Nope...not according to my manual (and there has been no change or improvement since my model year) - they STILL list GCWR, Max GTW (gross trailer wt) & Max Trailer Tongue Wt.
There is no separate "max payload weight"
in fact they continue to use a standard definitions & their only mention of payload is:
Payload
The payload of a vehicle is defined as the allowable load weight a truck can carry, including the weight of the driver, all passengers, options and cargo.
depending on the year model and gearing the current JK GCWR is between 5329 & 8280 w/ a Max Trailer weight of between 3500 & 2000 lbs (again axles, springs & gearing effect these numbers as do mods like tires bumpers winches etc).
my BET (based on a 4200+ lb jeep which is the lightest) you'd never be able to get a 3500 lb trailer connected and still be able to stay under the GCWR because the gearing won't support it (even by the manufactures definition)....by the time you COULD get close to the GCWR the jeep models weight itself has increased such that you be over the GCWR (again).
published & available (free) manuals only cover the last 10 years - http://www.jeep.com/en/owners/manuals/
โJul-15-2014 02:19 PM
Olddud wrote:
For newer Wranglers, I believe there is a separate payload capacity, that has nothing to do with towing, other than hitch weight.
โJul-15-2014 12:30 PM
wcjeep wrote:
Your 2k Wrangler capacity includes people, fuel, additional weight of mods and armor. Hopefully your not still running the Dana 35.
โJul-15-2014 09:38 AM
jeeper5usa wrote:
Sorry, forgot to mention, my jeep is modified and prefer not to tow it 4 down plus the fact that my owners manual advises against the 4 down, so I will probably be trailering it.
โJul-14-2014 05:38 PM
โJul-14-2014 05:22 PM
jeeper5usa wrote:
PghBob. Thanks for the heads up on the show. I'll definitely be there!
With a 2000 pull, I can pull a little guy travel trailer with no issues. Might not be the most comfortable but at 55mph I don't foresee a problem.
That's why I'm asking, researching. If I tow the Wrangler, it will be on a trailer, I'm thinking behind a Class C. Possible? Recommended? It's either that or a travel trailer around 1500 lbs.
โJul-14-2014 03:38 PM
โJul-14-2014 01:25 PM