โFeb-14-2019 05:54 AM
โFeb-19-2019 04:26 AM
โFeb-18-2019 05:47 PM
VA_Camper wrote:
I have a 2006 Ford F150 FX4 Supercrew with the following specs.
5.4L V8 Engine
3.73 gearing
139" wheel base
5509 curb weight
7200 GVWR
9200 Towing
With passengers, bikes, wood, etc. I would say that we have about 1000 pounds in the truck. Mainly because typically my wife and kids come later in a different vehicle. It could be more if we all ride together.
The trailer I am looking at has the following specs
2019 Heartland Pioneer 270BH
7700 GVWR
680 Hitch weight
32'-3" long back to tongue
The way I have it calculated is that I have combined trailer weight of 14189 with a GCWR of 16400. So, I have a reserved of 2211 pounds. So, numbers wise I should be fine. With a good WDH. I know the truck is capable. We have a 19 foot camper that it pulls fantastic. I have pulled a 24' camper with half ton trucks in the past without an issue. I am just wondering if it will pull it without damaging a 13 year old truck.
Opinions are welcome, please let me know what you think.
โFeb-18-2019 04:36 PM
VA_Camper wrote:
Right now our longest trips are typically 60 miles. Because I live in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia. Anywhere I go, typically requires me to go over a decent hill or mountain. We have thought of taking it towards the coast. That would definitely require us to have 5 mile climb.
โFeb-18-2019 04:32 PM
twodownzero wrote:
You are out of payload before even getting in the truck. 5500 curb weight + 1000 pounds of stuff + 700 pounds of tongue weight on your unloaded trailer and you'll have no GVWR left for passengers. If your 1k estimate is right and includes passengers, even a few pound increase in hitch weight puts you over GVWR.
I think it'd be suicide to try to hitch these two together. Anything over 28-30 feet with a 1/2 ton is pushing it. On a heavy 4 door 1/2 ton, especially so.
โFeb-18-2019 02:46 PM
mkirsch wrote:
Unfortunately you're really not going to get any useful information from this forum. Everybody's either going to try to convince you that you can tow anything, or you're going to die for even considering this. Neither is true, but few seem to be able to talk reasonably, and nobody listens to the ones with reasonable answers. It's all about glomming on to the person that tells you what you want to hear.
So, if you're looking for an excuse to buy a new truck, listen to "suicide."
If you don't want to buy a new truck, listen to "tows anything."
I'm done trying to talk reason on this forum.
โFeb-18-2019 02:44 PM
twodownzero wrote:Grit dog wrote:
"I think it'd be suicide to try to hitch these two together."
Wow! Suicide! Never really thought of it that way....Admittedly it will be slow up hill and drinking gas like an alcoholic the whole time, but "suicide" is a bit harsh.
I'd do it, but I'd prefer more power and gears than that truck provides.
The bigger question is the health of a 13 year old pickup. Short trips like the OP mentions are likely pretty benign if the truck is in decent shape, but the age, miles, condition and driver knowledge/skill/comfort level are AS important if not more than the printed recommendations for the vehicle. (Within reason of course)
No, the real question is the P-metric tires and the C clip rear axle and when they decide to exit each other. It isn't like a 3/4 or 1 ton truck where the axle itself is rated for over 10,000 lbs even though the tires are only rated for 6400. Granted a 3/4 ton truck isn't going to have the suspension to support that kind of weight regardless of tires, but at least the other hard parts are rated for way beyond the soft ones like the tires.
Once the paper mache tires either give out or start swaying, or the rear axle gives out (take your pick between the single tapered axle bearing, c clip, or worse), you have no reserve. Suicide is modest compared to coming down a mountain with all that weight riding on one tiny axle shaft per side.
โFeb-18-2019 12:09 PM
โFeb-18-2019 10:29 AM
โFeb-18-2019 10:18 AM
Grit dog wrote:
"I think it'd be suicide to try to hitch these two together."
Wow! Suicide! Never really thought of it that way....Admittedly it will be slow up hill and drinking gas like an alcoholic the whole time, but "suicide" is a bit harsh.
I'd do it, but I'd prefer more power and gears than that truck provides.
The bigger question is the health of a 13 year old pickup. Short trips like the OP mentions are likely pretty benign if the truck is in decent shape, but the age, miles, condition and driver knowledge/skill/comfort level are AS important if not more than the printed recommendations for the vehicle. (Within reason of course)
โFeb-18-2019 10:10 AM
โFeb-14-2019 04:45 PM
โFeb-14-2019 03:46 PM
โFeb-14-2019 12:49 PM
โFeb-14-2019 11:31 AM