โApr-08-2016 10:32 AM
โAug-17-2017 06:42 PM
bailer6334 wrote:
Gator Mike,
My GD 2150 dry weighed is 5,384 lbs, with a hitch weight of 412 lbs according to GD's build sheet. That said when I weighted the tongue with a sherline tongue weight unit, it weighed 680 lbs (this included 2 batteries, 2 propane tanks, no water but other stuff in the rig. ) Add 90 lbs for the Equalizer 4 point WDH assembly and that makes up the 770 lbs of tongue weight. While my Dodge Durango pulled the trailer without problems, because of its uni-body frame/suspension, from a safety point I had to move to a tow vehicle with a higher hitch capacity. My issue is while I got a good deal price wise on the Chevy 2500HD DMAX I typically only use it 1 week every month. I hestitate to use it as a grocery getter/errand runner because of the emmisions stuff on newer diesels. Thats why I'm looking at gas tow vehicles. The Sequoia looked like a viable choice until I was told about the hitch capacity limits.
Do you use the existing mirrors or do you have 3rd party mirror extenders?
Glad the Sequoia works for you. I still need to think about what I want to do.
โAug-17-2017 06:33 PM
โAug-16-2017 06:57 PM
โAug-15-2017 07:12 PM
bailer6334 wrote:
I'm confused. I was looking at a 2017 Sequoia to pull my 6695lb GVWR TT. I have weighed the tongue and it weighs 770lbs camping ready.
I had to get rid of my Dodge Durango because it only had a 720lb hitch capacity, and I like to have a safety factor when I tow.
When I talked to the Toyota dealer and the customer support people at the factory they told me the hitch weight capacity maximum is 10% of the vehicles GVWR. When you look at the Limited and Platimum specs you see it has a GVWR of 7300lbs max. To me that means the Hitch capacity maximum is onlt 730lbs.
I understand some vehicles manufactures allow for a increase in hitch capacity when using a WDH, however Toyota does not allow the increase.
So how do some folks have in excess of 850lbs on the hitch and feel that its safe? As I say I'm confused.
โAug-14-2017 07:57 AM
โAug-13-2017 06:08 AM
โAug-12-2017 10:53 AM
RedRocket204 wrote:bluepost wrote:
I don't see where the hitch rating was ever de-rated. It obviously had to be at least 1000 lbs prior to J2807 to support a 10,000 max tow rating which would equate to a 10% tongue weight, the lightest I have ever seen specked out.
If this was in regards to my post, I was only pointing out the tow capacity of the 2010 Sequoia, which I recall was at 9100 lbs. It was on the 2011 Sequioa, with no change to the vehicle itself, where the tow capacity changed to 7100 lbs. I recall those numbers but could be slightly off by 100 lbs or so.
The Tundra also saw it's tow capacity fall as well for 2011, although not as much.
In case someone else is reading and trying to justify a use case for a Sequoia, I'll restate my opinion. I would not tow anything above 7000 lbs with our 2010 Sequioa Ltd. Under 7000 lbs, most likely but depends. I tow at altitude every time I tow. At altitude where I tow, up to 11,000 ft, I wouldn't want to tow anything above 6000 lbs with our Sequioa.
โAug-12-2017 07:17 AM
bluepost wrote:
I don't see where the hitch rating was ever de-rated. It obviously had to be at least 1000 lbs prior to J2807 to support a 10,000 max tow rating which would equate to a 10% tongue weight, the lightest I have ever seen specked out.
โAug-12-2017 06:44 AM
โAug-12-2017 04:34 AM
โAug-11-2017 11:53 PM
โAug-11-2017 06:38 AM
bluepost wrote:
https://pressroom.toyota.com/releases/2015+toyota+sequoia+product+specs.download
Says 880 to 1000 lbs on this Toyota spec sheet. If the 730 lbs was correct then when the Sequoia had a 10,000 lb tow rating before j2807 (2008 and 2009) the max tongue weight would only of been 7.3 %, way too low even for a boat.
โAug-11-2017 05:58 AM
โAug-10-2017 07:12 PM