cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

Do I need an weight distributing hitch for my Colorado?

VTLee
Explorer
Explorer
I have traded in my 5th wheel, which was pulled by an F250,for a small TT. I bought a new Chevy Colorado with a payload limit of 1510 lbs. and a towing limit of 7,000 lbs. The new trailer just arrived at the dealer and I will be picking it up in two days. The trailer is a Travel Lite Idea 2.0 that is 2970 lbs. dry, 18'9" hitch to bumper, 16' box length, 7' wide and 9' high. The dealer said that I should be ok without the WD hitch but I am starting to be a little skeptical. Does anyone have experience with the new generation Colorado/Canyon towing a trailer? Any other thoughts about the need for a WD hitch would be appreciated.
14 REPLIES 14

gmw_photos
Explorer
Explorer
I tow a travel trailer (funfinder 189FDS) that is essentially the same size and weight with a Nissan Frontier, which is very similar in size and capability to his Colorado. My trailer has a factory claimed weight of 3040 pounds and 350 tongue. Actual weight as loaded is 4000 with 580 tongue.

I've towed it just on the ball, and also with WD. No doubt it tows better ( more stable ) and is a better setup ( front axle is now loaded back to unladen weight ) with the BlueOx swaypro installed.

According to the Nissan manual, WD is not "required" unless the trailer is over 4500 or tongue over 600. Having said that, setting up the BlueOx for 100% FALR makes this combo tow very well indeed. Well over 30K miles of towing it so far.

drsteve
Explorer
Explorer
Well this is interesting... GM installed incorrect receivers on certain Colorado/Canyon trucks with the HD towing package. 3500 lb tow rating rather than the correct 7000 lb rated receiver.

http://gm.oemdtc.com/6130/27620-incorrect-trailer-hitch-2015-2016-chevrolet-colorado-gmc-canyon
2006 Silverado 1500HD Crew Cab 2WD 6.0L 3.73 8600 GVWR
2018 Coachmen Catalina Legacy Edition 223RBS
1991 Palomino Filly PUP

drsteve
Explorer
Explorer
BarneyS wrote:
Do you REALLY think that trailer will have more tongue weight than his receivers limits? Here is what the OP said about the trailer he is getting.
" The trailer is a Travel Lite Idea 2.0 that is 2970 lbs. dry, 18'9" hitch to bumper, 16' box length, 7' wide and 9' high."


Yes. I'm assuming the Colorado's receiver is rated for 500 lbs without WD. The Idea 2.0 is 2970 dry, but add 1000 lbs for full fresh tank and some cargo, and the tongue is going to be a shade over 500. The Idea, btw, has a GVWR of... wait for it... 7245 lbs. Could be a typo, but regardless, he's going to want WD with that trailer and truck. IMHO.

http://travellitecampers.com/travel-trailers/travel-lite-idea-i15q/
2006 Silverado 1500HD Crew Cab 2WD 6.0L 3.73 8600 GVWR
2018 Coachmen Catalina Legacy Edition 223RBS
1991 Palomino Filly PUP

mkirsch
Nomad II
Nomad II
I hope the spring packs in the current Colorados are better than the previous generation. A friend of mine had a GMC Canyon and that thing would sag almost to the axle with a mere 150lbs of tongue weight!

For the record, with NOTHING in the bed, and nobody in the cab.

He had to take it to a spring shop to have the springs recurved and a leaf added. Even then it wasn't that great. The same 150lbs would still drop the rear end 2".

Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

BarneyS
Explorer III
Explorer III
drsteve wrote:
Consult the owner's manual. That trailer will probably have more tongue weight than the receiver will handle without WD. The Colorado will drive and handle better with WD too.

Do you REALLY think that trailer will have more tongue weight than his receivers limits? Here is what the OP said about the trailer he is getting.
" The trailer is a Travel Lite Idea 2.0 that is 2970 lbs. dry, 18'9" hitch to bumper, 16' box length, 7' wide and 9' high."

I would suspect that his loaded tongue weight will not be much more than around 400lbs. That is well within the weight carrying ability of almost every receiver that I am aware of.

I do agree however that the Andersen hitch would make a good match for his trailer and that WD will give him some benefits already mentioned.
Barney
2004 Sunnybrook Titan 30FKS TT
Hensley "Arrow" 1400# hitch (Sold)
Not towing now.
Former tow vehicles were 2016 Ram 2500 CTD, 2002 Ford F250, 7.3 PSD, 1997 Ram 2500 5.9 gas engine

drsteve
Explorer
Explorer
Consult the owner's manual. That trailer will probably have more tongue weight than the receiver will handle without WD. The Colorado will drive and handle better with WD too.
2006 Silverado 1500HD Crew Cab 2WD 6.0L 3.73 8600 GVWR
2018 Coachmen Catalina Legacy Edition 223RBS
1991 Palomino Filly PUP

Earl_E
Explorer
Explorer
Please look very close at the Andersen system. It is much easier to hook up and unhook, is very light and will do everything you want with much more ease than a big equalizer. I had used the Equal-i-zer for years and it worked great but would never go back to it unless I had a huge trailer.
2007 Northwoods Arctic Fox 32 5S Fifth Wheel used for fulltiming for several years--SOLD
2014 Sunnybrook 26rl to poke around the smaller parks in the great Southwest
2007 Chevy Silverado 2500 HD Diesel
Prodigy brake control

burningman
Explorer II
Explorer II
Even if it sits OK sitting still, when you hit the wrong dip or wavy "wow" in the road, the weight distributing hitch will help keep the truck level instead of doing a porpoise.
When you're moving all sorts of dynamics are in play.

Dealer salesmen are rarely towing experts. Most don't really know much about cars at all. They do know how to sound confident and knowledgeable and sell cars.
You did the right thing asking your question here instead of buying whatever line of... uh... rose petals the dealer tells you.
2017 Northern Lite 10-2 EX CD SE
99 Ram 4x4 Dually Cummins
A whole lot more fuel, a whole lot more boost.
4.10 gears, Gear Vendors overdrive, exhaust brake
Built auto, triple disc, billet shafts.
Kelderman Air Ride, Helwig sway bar.

deltabravo
Nomad
Nomad
Yes, for sure go with a weight distributing hitch.

I have a similar size small TT and would like a Colorado/Canyon some day, and will for sure use a WD Hitch
2009 Silverado 3500HD Dually, D/A, CCLB 4x4 (bought new 8/30/09)
2018 Arctic Fox 992 with an Onan 2500i "quiet" model generator

jamesu
Explorer
Explorer
You are downsizing from a 3/4 ton & 5th wheel to a small pickup and small TT. WDH? I would. By the time you load up water, supplies, etc. for a trip you will have plenty of weight for that truck to tow. WDH will give you a better, safer ride and tow.
2011 Chevy 2500 Duramax diesel
2019 Timber Ridge 24RLS (Outdoors RV)
Go Cougs!

eHoefler
Explorer II
Explorer II
bikendan wrote:
Have you even read the towing section of truck's manual?
Should state what tongue weight requires using a WDH.
My Avalanche's does.
.



So does the reciever on the truck.
2021 Ram Limited, 3500, Crew Cab, 1075FTPD of Torque!, Max Tow, Long bed, 4 x 4, Dually,
2006 40' Landmark Mt. Rushmore

bikendan
Explorer
Explorer
Have you even read the towing section of truck's manual?
Should state what tongue weight requires using a WDH.
My Avalanche's does.
Dan- Firefighter, Retired:C, Shawn- Musician/Entrepreneur:W, Zoe- Faithful Golden Retriever(RIP:(), 2014 Ford F150 3.5 EcoboostMax Tow pkg, 2016 PrimeTime TracerAIR 255 w/4pt Equalizer and 5 Mtn. bikes and 2 Road bikes

The_real_wild1
Explorer
Explorer
Set it up with a regular hitch and try it. If you feel you need "more" then buy the equalizer. Chances are pretty good you will prefer the equalizer with that truck.

4aSong
Explorer
Explorer
Not familiar with the 'new generation Colorado/Canyon' but a properly setup WDH will transfer the weight equally to the tow vehicle thereby preventing the feel of the floating and wandering of the front end of the tow vehicle. The minimal cost to purchase & properly install a WDH both for safety and eliminating the white knuckling feeling when towing is money well spent.
M & N

Tundra TRD V8 4x4 w/Leer Shell
EU2000i * Prodigy * McKesh * Trek * Renogy * ENU