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best vehicle to tow

popsgrams
Explorer
Explorer
I have a Road Trek RV.What vehicle is best to tow behind my motorhome. One to drive when motorhome is park. Some say a jeep.
15 REPLIES 15

RVMike
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 1972 Baja Bug that I rebuilt several years ago. Good on gas and goes anywhere. Mine has a lot of fiberglass on it and weights 1800lbs full of gas. It is also my daily driver at home.

tenbear
Explorer
Explorer
To me, the best car to tow is your daily driver. In my case it's a Subaru, manual transmission. Easy on gas and goes anywhere.
Class C, 2004/5 Four Winds Dutchman Express 28A, Chevy chassis
2010 Subaru Impreza Sedan
Camped in 45 states, 7 Provinces and 1 Territory

dieharder
Explorer
Explorer
The Chevy HHR is a great vehicle to tow. I loved mine.
1999 Itasca Sunrise

Jim_Shoe
Explorer
Explorer
My first RV was a Roadtrek. If I were you, I'd rent one first. They may be better now than the one I had. For starters, it was on a Dodge chassis. Dodge went belly up. Maybe the running gear is better now. It was terribly underpowered. It would downshift going over a bump in the road. (Slight exaggeration).
I fell in love with everything doing double duty. The dinette was also the bed. The toilet was also a closet. the kitchen was also the shower because that's where the drain was. And all the double duty were things were compromises.
But the biggest problem for me was that I'm a visitor. The CG is just where I park to see what I came to see. More than once, when I returned to the CG, my spot was taken. So I had to pack everything up just to go to the grocery store. Finally, it took two parking spaces on the street, often having to feed two meters, and it was too high for a parking garage.
I traded it in for a 'C', pulling a Jeep Wrangler toad. Now I'm happy and I hope that whoever got the Roadtrek is happy, too.
Retired and visiting as much of this beautiful country as I can.

4X4Dodger
Explorer II
Explorer II
A very very popular car to be towed is now the little Fiat 500.

They are light, cheap, well made,can be towed 4 wheels down and are deadly cute.

Other than that my personal choice would be an Aston Martin Vanquish

EsoxLucius
Explorer
Explorer
Bobbo wrote:
EsoxLucius wrote:
No way a Road Trek based on the Mercedes Benz Sprinter has a towing capacity of 8000 lbs. Expect a 5000 lbs. towing capacity.

Find good info on potential toads here: http://www.royrobinsonrv.com/rv-towing-guide-washington


You can take that up with Roadtrek. Scroll down to specifications. This is the Roadtrek 190.

http://www.roadtrek.com/models/190-popular/
OP didn't specify the Road Trek model. MB Sprinter versions will be limited to 5,000 lbs. The Chevy versions will tow more. Thanks!
2013 LTV Unity MB Theater Seats
635 watts solar panels, 440 AH batteries, BlueSky Solar Boost 3024iL & IPN-Pro Remote, Magnum MS2000 & ME-RC50 remote
Koni Shocks F & R, Hellwig 7254, SumoSprings F & R
2012 Hyundai Accent SE, Blue Ox Aladdin/Patriot

rockhillmanor
Explorer
Explorer
1. Find out what your RV is rated for towing.

2. Find a toad that is as light weight as you can find. The game is NOT what car you can find that is closest to the lbs you're RV is rated to tow. :R

You want your RV driving to be fun and not a pain pulling a heavy toad around trying to get up hills, steep grades, and putting a load on the engine of your RV, etc.

Also I would suggest you buy a car that YOU LIKE and will 'also' be of good use on a daily basis when not being towed by the RV.

I have a Chevy Tracker. They are a pretty popular choice with RV'ers because they are light weight. Mine is also a 4x4, 4-door which can seat 5 and when back seats down allowing a huge cargo area. So keep in mind how many are in your family and how well they will all fit in the toad and how much cargo space you want.

That said. Another tip is: When looking at cars do NOT listen to any salesperson if it can be towed 4 down or not. They don't know and will lie thru their teeth to make a sale. Seen it first hand.

The "owners manual" is the bible, it will tell you if the car can be towed four down. It's listed under "Recreational Towing" in the manual. So push the salesman aside and go for the glove box for the car's manual to find out before you buy it!

Good Luck finding the perfect toad.

We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.

Turtle_n_Peeps
Explorer
Explorer
I say Bugatti Veyron.
~ Too many freaks & not enough circuses ~


"Life is not tried ~ it is merely survived ~ if you're standing
outside the fire"

"The best way to get a bad law repealed is to enforce it strictly."- Abraham Lincoln

ncrowley
Explorer II
Explorer II
The vehicle GVWR is 9600 labs. The GCWR is 16000 pounds. This means you have 6400 pounds for the contents of the RV and anything you are pulling. My Jeep Rubicon is 4500 labs. This leaves you 1900 pounds for whatever you put in the RV and the Jeep - this includes fresh water, the people, food, clothes, dishes, etc. It sounds like you will be fine.
Nancy
Newmar Northern Star

navegator
Explorer
Explorer
Depending on what you intend to do with the towed vehicle, are you just going to go sight seeing, running around town or you want to go of the beaten path and need a 4x4 vehicle.

If simple around town driving a simple car will be good and if you want to go off road on a jeep jamboree and climb rocks get a 4x4, what ever you find make sure that the RV has the pulling capacity and stopping capacity to stop both.

navegator

Bobbo
Explorer II
Explorer II
EsoxLucius wrote:
No way a Road Trek based on the Mercedes Benz Sprinter has a towing capacity of 8000 lbs. Expect a 5000 lbs. towing capacity.

Find good info on potential toads here: http://www.royrobinsonrv.com/rv-towing-guide-washington


You can take that up with Roadtrek. Scroll down to specifications. This is the Roadtrek 190.

http://www.roadtrek.com/models/190-popular/
Bobbo and Lin
2017 F-150 XLT 4x4 SuperCab w/Max Tow Package 3.5l EcoBoost V6
2017 Airstream Flying Cloud 23FB

EsoxLucius
Explorer
Explorer
No way a Road Trek based on the Mercedes Benz Sprinter has a towing capacity of 8000 lbs. Expect a 5000 lbs. towing capacity.

Find good info on potential toads here: http://www.royrobinsonrv.com/rv-towing-guide-washington
2013 LTV Unity MB Theater Seats
635 watts solar panels, 440 AH batteries, BlueSky Solar Boost 3024iL & IPN-Pro Remote, Magnum MS2000 & ME-RC50 remote
Koni Shocks F & R, Hellwig 7254, SumoSprings F & R
2012 Hyundai Accent SE, Blue Ox Aladdin/Patriot

Bumpyroad
Explorer
Explorer
I towed a Dakota P/u , chevy trakker, and set up my VUE to tow. be sure to check the owner's manual under recreational towing or towing behind a motorhome to confirm your choice. avoid anything that needs a drive shaft disconnect or tranny pump to tow it.
bumpy

Bobbo
Explorer II
Explorer II
I looked RT up and saw an 8,000+ pound towing limit. You can tow most anything you want to. Personally, I like Subarus, but they have to be manual transmission. You can not tow a Subaru automatic transmission except 4 wheels up on a trailer.

What you need to do is decide what you want in a car OTHER THAN towing. When you have those parameters, you can narrow that list down to just the towable cars.
Bobbo and Lin
2017 F-150 XLT 4x4 SuperCab w/Max Tow Package 3.5l EcoBoost V6
2017 Airstream Flying Cloud 23FB