May-17-2018 10:16 AM
May-19-2018 06:05 PM
May-19-2018 04:53 PM
gmw photos wrote:
A weight distributing hitch is an excellent addition for safety. I would not rule it out just because you read on a forum that you can't use it on your model of car. Research it on the Toyota website ( in your reading on it, be specific about what year your vehicle is ), and do some reading from several sources then come to a conclusion whether to use one or not.
May-19-2018 04:02 PM
RTCastillo wrote:gmw photos wrote:
A weight distributing hitch is an excellent addition for safety. I would not rule it out just because you read on a forum that you can't use it on your model of car. Research it on the Toyota website ( in your reading on it, be specific about what year your vehicle is ), and do some reading from several sources then come to a conclusion whether to use one or not.
I stopped my add-ons with a portable generator and have not experienced uncontrolled sway or buckling so I may not need one after all. But thanks for the advice.
May-19-2018 03:42 PM
RandomAbstract wrote:RTCastillo wrote:
RandomAbstract
"The trailer I was is an Outdoors RV 21RBS. On the edge of too heavy for the Grand Cherokee. So, $40k for the trailer and $70k for a truck to pull it. * image not shown due to your preference setting *"> "
I'm pretty sure you are making us envious with this trailer and tow truck combo, lol.
Oops. When reading your reply, realized I made a typo. The rig I WANT is as described. I am about $109,999 short at the moment. 😞
I spent 3 months last year living in my Coachmen with no water because it was below freezing and the underbelly isn't insulated. The Outdoors trailer would have fixed that. (I used the black/gray tanks with anti-freeze and jerry cans for water. Worked fine.)
I had to temporarily move to arid regions for health reasons, so my trailer money went to doctors. 😞
I visited the Outdoors RV factory in Oregon 3 years ago. Very impressed, especially for someone who likes to frequent BLM land,
May-19-2018 03:40 PM
gmw photos wrote:
A weight distributing hitch is an excellent addition for safety. I would not rule it out just because you read on a forum that you can't use it on your model of car. Research it on the Toyota website ( in your reading on it, be specific about what year your vehicle is ), and do some reading from several sources then come to a conclusion whether to use one or not.
May-19-2018 06:55 AM
RTCastillo wrote:
RandomAbstract
"The trailer I was is an Outdoors RV 21RBS. On the edge of too heavy for the Grand Cherokee. So, $40k for the trailer and $70k for a truck to pull it. * image not shown due to your preference setting *"> "
I'm pretty sure you are making us envious with this trailer and tow truck combo, lol.
May-19-2018 05:36 AM
May-18-2018 01:06 PM
May-18-2018 12:55 PM
RandomAbstract wrote:RTCastillo wrote:Ralph Cramden wrote:RTCastillo wrote:
Geez Ralph, now you have me worrying about something else: tires.
My 4runner is still on stock tires and suspension system. Read varying opinions to change to truck tires and add air-spring suspensions at the back.
But also read from a couple who've traveled thousand of miles coast-to-coast on all road conditions on a 4runner also pulling 5,000 lbs trailer with no problem.
Don't worry about the tires on the Toyo........The tires on the trailer may be the ones to worry about. Forget the forum BS about what brand they are....I'd want a load range D at least, and its a good bet if the Coachmen used a 3500lb axle they put on load range C.
Thanks! That calls for another research -- although I do walk throughs on my mind's checklist even for short trips.
My Coachmen came with 'C's. I immediately went to 'D's.
Tires are what keep you alive on the road.
May-18-2018 12:14 PM
Ralph Cramden wrote:RandomAbstract wrote:RTCastillo wrote:rexlion wrote:RTCastillo wrote:5000 lbs? The Dutchmen website shows a cargo weight capacity of just 645 lbs for the 17fq. Are you grossly overweight, or did the spec change?
Apprehensive at first. We can't get in and out of LA basin without passing the dreaded-white knuckle Grapevine-Tejon (14 miles - 6 degree grade), Cajon Pass (also 14 miles - 6 degrees) and Conejo.
In a Carpenteria trip, our first, we avoided Conejo uphill by taking the Malibu-I 10 route.
But can't with the Yosemite trip. Oh yeah, and snowed out.
Took the Grapevine-Tejon on a wing and a prayer. A pleasant surprise. Both downhill and uphill, the 4runner is in full control and way up with power to spare (on 3,400 rpm tops with no sign of over exertion).
I'm pulling a Coleman 17FQ (no kidding, you can't make this up) rated at 3,650 pounds and nearing 5,000 pounds loaded.
Cajon pass next - this time with more confidence on the way to North Rim Grand Canyon.
Am referring to 4runner's towing capability while the trailer's dry weight is 3,205 lbs. I drive with all my fluid tanks empty.
I was wondering. I have a Coachman Clipper 17FQ and it weighs 4,000 pound fully loaded and dripping wet. Was also wondering how a 3,500 pound axle could hold up to 5,000 pounds.
I cheat and tow it with a Grand Cherokee 5.7 Hemi!
Because a certain percentage of the 4000 lbs is on the tow vehicle as tongue weight and with a single axle trailer that percentage is typically higher than a tandem axle trailer. Also a 3500 lb axle is capable of carrying way more than the 3500 lb rating as engineers always list the capacity of anything a long ways below than the true number. The weak point may be the tires. Someone will be along shortly to tell you that you need load range W Goodyear Endurance or Sailuns or something.
Your Coachman may also in actuality have a D35 or if it has Torflex a #10L, which are 4K axles......same as a D30 or #10, different rating.
All the manufacturer has to meet when they print the Fed certification is GVWR less TW does not exceed axle rating.
May-18-2018 12:08 PM
RTCastillo wrote:Ralph Cramden wrote:RTCastillo wrote:
Geez Ralph, now you have me worrying about something else: tires.
My 4runner is still on stock tires and suspension system. Read varying opinions to change to truck tires and add air-spring suspensions at the back.
But also read from a couple who've traveled thousand of miles coast-to-coast on all road conditions on a 4runner also pulling 5,000 lbs trailer with no problem.
Don't worry about the tires on the Toyo........The tires on the trailer may be the ones to worry about. Forget the forum BS about what brand they are....I'd want a load range D at least, and its a good bet if the Coachmen used a 3500lb axle they put on load range C.
Thanks! That calls for another research -- although I do walk throughs on my mind's checklist even for short trips.
May-18-2018 10:32 AM
Ralph Cramden wrote:RTCastillo wrote:
Geez Ralph, now you have me worrying about something else: tires.
My 4runner is still on stock tires and suspension system. Read varying opinions to change to truck tires and add air-spring suspensions at the back.
But also read from a couple who've traveled thousand of miles coast-to-coast on all road conditions on a 4runner also pulling 5,000 lbs trailer with no problem.
Don't worry about the tires on the Toyo........The tires on the trailer may be the ones to worry about. Forget the forum BS about what brand they are....I'd want a load range D at least, and its a good bet if the Coachmen used a 3500lb axle they put on load range C.
May-18-2018 10:28 AM
SpeakEasy wrote:
OP, I hope you're not using a weight-distribution hitch with that 4-Runner. I was, and had to trade in my 4-Runner when I found out that Toyota does "not recommend" using weight distribution with that vehicle.
-Speak
May-18-2018 10:05 AM
RTCastillo wrote:
Geez Ralph, now you have me worrying about something else: tires.
My 4runner is still on stock tires and suspension system. Read varying opinions to change to truck tires and add air-spring suspensions at the back.
But also read from a couple who've traveled thousand of miles coast-to-coast on all road conditions on a 4runner also pulling 5,000 lbs trailer with no problem.
May-18-2018 06:07 AM