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Mountain Towing

GraySwain
Explorer
Explorer
The wife and I are about to purchase our first camper. Most likely a 5th wheel. A friend mentioned, since we will be towing in the mountains some, to stay small for weight and maneuverability. Considering the steep grades is a 3/4 ton necessary even for something as light as light as +/-7200lbs? Any and all opinions on towing in the mountains would be appreciated. Not opposed to a 3/4 if we have to but almost certainly not going the diesel route. Thanks
38 REPLIES 38

goducks10
Explorer
Explorer
A 7200 lb 5th wheel would be fine behind a 1/2 ton IMO. 5th wheels handle much better than travel trailers. Power wise most all 1/2 tons have the power to pull that easily. Payload will be the harder part. You'll need to look on the trucks door jamb for a sticker that shows the Cargo Carry Capacity. The brochure weights are not the same as the actual door sticker weight.

Right now I think the best option is a Ford F150 with the 3.5 Eco motor and the Max Tow package. Fords seem to have higher CCC than Ram and Chevy.

gmckenzie
Explorer
Explorer
Check the payload of any truck you are looking at. At 7200 GVW (if you are looking at the trailer dry weight, don't), a 5th wheel pin weight could be 1500 lbs. For a lot of 1/2 tons, that will exceed their payload. Remember to add the weight of the 5th wheel hitch as well as people.

Also, be wary of jumping to a 3/4 ton diesel. Payload on some of them is barely 2000 lbs (the same as my half ton). And while I do think a 3/4 ton diesel will tow better than my half ton, if both within limits, I'd not want to move to a 3/4 ton and be disappointed in the payload. Gas 3/4 ton typically have 500 or so more payload than a diesel comparably equipped.

New trucks, like the 2020 GMC HD, have thrown this out the window.
2015 GMC Sierra 4x4 CC SB Max Trailer
2010 Cougar 30RKS

Grit_dog
Nomad III
Nomad III
steelhunter wrote:
GraySwain wrote:
The wife and I are about to purchase our first camper. Most likely a 5th wheel. A friend mentioned, since we will be towing in the mountains some, to stay small for weight and maneuverability. Considering the steep grades is a 3/4 ton necessary even for something as light as light as +/-7200lbs? Any and all opinions on towing in the mountains would be appreciated. Not opposed to a 3/4 if we have to but almost certainly not going the diesel route. Thanks


For a 7200lb trailer a 3/4 is an imperative under any circumstances.


Lol, riiiight...
But on a more serious note since the OP has no towing experience.
HD pickup will handle the load better.well equipped 1/2 ton will pull that weight fine.
7200lb ready to roll 5ver, be careful. Thatโ€™s like a 5500-6000 lb dry unit. Not a ton of those for sale.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5โ€ turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Terryallan
Explorer II
Explorer II
Remember. what ever you get. learn to gear down. Going up the mountain is easy. Coming down is the hard part. A TV must be able to hold the trailer back with out having to ride the brakes.
Terry & Shay
Coachman Apex 288BH.
2013 F150 XLT Off Road
5.0, 3.73
Lazy Campers

sgfrye
Explorer
Explorer
keep it simple...... 3/4 ton, chevy, ford, dodge. pick the one you like the best. gasser is fine. and cheaper to maintain.

Lynnmor
Explorer
Explorer
A 1/2 ton is LESS truck no matter what all those numbers say. For a 5th wheel, I would want MORE truck.

JIMNLIN
Explorer
Explorer
Some 1/2 ton trucks will not have any problems towing a 7200 wet weight trailer in the mountains.
In fact some 1/2 ton trucks will have superior engine performance/power in the mountains or high wind flatlands over most 3/4 ton gas trucks.
Example is Fords F150HDPP at 8200-7850 gvwr and 4800 rawr with a 3.5 ecoboost engine rated at 375hp/470 torque.

Now if your 7200 lb trailer is a dry weight then a 3/4 ton gas or diesel make better cents/sense.
That 7200 lb dry weight can have a 10k gvwr. These size trailers can have 2000 lb plus pin weight. Now add another 200 lbs for a hitch and another 100-300 lbs in the bed = maybe 2500 lbs on the rear axle. Not a good match for a 1/2 ton truck.

A 3/4 ton truck with those big 6000-6500 rawr can safely carry/stop 3000+ lb rear axle loads. Actual numbers depends on truck selections and actual scaled axle weights.
"good judgment comes from experience, and a lot of that comes from bad judgment" ............ Will Rogers

'03 2500 QC Dodge/Cummins HO 3.73 6 speed manual Jacobs Westach
'97 Park Avanue 28' 5er 11200 two slides

wing_zealot
Explorer
Explorer
The best thing for you to do is to read up on towing and tow vehicles so you can understand all the variables that go into this question. Start here Clicky

For instance "For a 7200lb trailer a 3/4 is an imperative under any circumstances." My 1/2 ton will handle a fully loaded 8500 lbs fifth wheel without a problem, and still have room for 625 lbs of passengers and gear; all within all its manufacturer's ratings. Lots 1/2 tons could not. So "Imperative under any circumstances" is flat out wrong. Its all in the details, hence, the need to read the clicky.

steelhunter
Explorer
Explorer
GraySwain wrote:
The wife and I are about to purchase our first camper. Most likely a 5th wheel. A friend mentioned, since we will be towing in the mountains some, to stay small for weight and maneuverability. Considering the steep grades is a 3/4 ton necessary even for something as light as light as +/-7200lbs? Any and all opinions on towing in the mountains would be appreciated. Not opposed to a 3/4 if we have to but almost certainly not going the diesel route. Thanks


For a 7200lb trailer a 3/4 is an imperative under any circumstances.