Apr-12-2016 08:32 AM
Apr-13-2016 06:07 AM
dodge guy wrote:
What I`m saying is I would do it because there is nothing illegal or unsafe about it!
Your either going to do this or your not! you can be sued in an accident even if you were towing a pop up with the van! fact is an accident while towing is very remote. you are putting way too much thought into this.
Apr-13-2016 04:23 AM
jerryrigged wrote:dodge guy wrote:
Again, nothing against the law to tow an 11k lb trailer with a proper rated hitch. And again, the 10k rating is based on a 10k hitch.
An excursion originally was rated at 10k lbs tow rating. In 02 the rating went to 12,500lbs, the only difference was the attaching hardware. So with the proper hardware on an early Excursion you could tow 12k lbs.
same goes for my Excursion. It was rated from the factory at 17k lbs GCWR with 3.73 gears. With 4.30 gears it went up to 20k lbs GCWR. So yes you can tow a heavier trailer if you do it safely.
You can tow a heavier trailer and stay within the factory weight specs.
That's my concern. The E350 was never rated at 12000 lbs in any year. The max ever was 10000, and that is with the best towing gear.
Your situation seems different. Seems the 4.30 gears was a factory option, although not installed on your vehicle (and you upgraded)
Apr-12-2016 09:07 PM
Apr-12-2016 08:20 PM
dodge guy wrote:
Again, nothing against the law to tow an 11k lb trailer with a proper rated hitch. And again, the 10k rating is based on a 10k hitch.
An excursion originally was rated at 10k lbs tow rating. In 02 the rating went to 12,500lbs, the only difference was the attaching hardware. So with the proper hardware on an early Excursion you could tow 12k lbs.
same goes for my Excursion. It was rated from the factory at 17k lbs GCWR with 3.73 gears. With 4.30 gears it went up to 20k lbs GCWR. So yes you can tow a heavier trailer if you do it safely.
You can tow a heavier trailer and stay within the factory weight specs.
Apr-12-2016 02:45 PM
Apr-12-2016 01:55 PM
Campfire Time wrote:Ok - show me where someone even filed such a suit.bid_time wrote:
It might be a remotely believable yarn if you could only point to one legitimate case of "Overweight Negligence = Liability"
Since most civil suits are settled out of court, might be hard to find one. Just because you can't easily find one doesn't mean they don't exist.
What is believable is that we (US) live in a very litigious society. People sue for anything and everything. A friend had a neighbor who lived off of frivolous lawsuits. So honestly, if think you would never be the defendant in a civil liability suit for towing over your limits, you are spinning your own yarn.
Apr-12-2016 01:48 PM
Jayco-noslide wrote:
I wouldn't knowingly go beyond the recommended capacities with any kind of RV equipment. If for no other reason, think of the liability if there is an accident.
Apr-12-2016 01:06 PM
Apr-12-2016 01:01 PM
Apr-12-2016 11:52 AM
Apr-12-2016 11:29 AM
westend wrote:
I've got a feeling that this is one of those, "I know it's wrong but I'll ask anyway" threads.
bid_time wrote:
What is rated at 11,000 lbs? GVWR trailer (max loaded weight)
what is rated at 10,000 lbs? Stock pulling weight of van.
What is the tow rating of the E350? (same as prev. 10k lbs)
What is the GVWR of the trailer you want to haul? (see above)
Do you know what the tongue weight on the trailer is? 870 dry.
What does the payload sticker on the E350 say? I've done the math on all this, incl. GCWR, and not really the question, but if you think its essential, I can go look it up again.
(the payload sticker is on the door and will say something to the effect of "the maximum load of all passengers and payload shall not exceed x,xxx lbs.)
Apr-12-2016 11:24 AM
phillyg wrote:
Are you saying the hitch is rated higher than the van's max tow rating? If so, I don't see how that makes it "illegal" to sell, unless you're willing to pull 11,000lbs with a vehicle only rated for 10,000lbs, but that's on you, not the hitch seller.
Apr-12-2016 11:09 AM
bid_time wrote:
It might be a remotely believable yarn if you could only point to one legitimate case of "Overweight Negligence = Liability"
Apr-12-2016 10:50 AM
Apr-12-2016 10:48 AM