โJun-20-2015 09:21 AM
โJun-21-2015 11:44 AM
seaeagle2 wrote:
When I bought my used F150, I was towing a 18 foot boat, and not intending to tow a TT (I didn't have a crystal ball either). Turns out, my truck doesn't have the tow package so it has a 5000 lb tow capacity. After posting a question on this website and having someone post a link to a trailer that would fit our needs, (under 5000 lbs with an oven, a Chalet Takena 1860 or 1860BH), we started looking to see if something else more readily available would fit the bill. Knowing the 5000 lb limit of our truck, the first thing we would tell the salesman was that our truck would tow 5000 lbs. The responses we got varied from "You need to buy a new truck before you can buy a trailer", to "Ahh, you're good for 7500 easy", "Those ratings have some fudge factor built in". Of 7 different salespeople at different dealers, 2 did actually listen and, say "well, lets look at what we've got that you can tow". So while I agree on the customer doing due diligence to know what they can tow, the average salesman, at least in my experience, doesn't really care......
โJun-21-2015 11:25 AM
โJun-20-2015 05:43 PM
โJun-20-2015 02:00 PM
โJun-20-2015 01:20 PM
rbpru wrote:
The dealerโs job is to show and sell you the product you want.
โJun-20-2015 01:18 PM
โJun-20-2015 01:07 PM
โJun-20-2015 01:04 PM
hohenwald48 wrote:
As a general rule, not listening to the salesman on any product purchase is a pretty good idea. The salesman's job is to make the sale.
...
With all the information available on the internet these days there's no excuse for being an ignorant purchaser of any product.
โJun-20-2015 12:14 PM
โJun-20-2015 11:11 AM
โJun-20-2015 10:53 AM
The dealerโs job is to show and sell you the product you want. He assumes you know or have a reasonable knowledge of your desired purchase and is not going to grill you with a bunch of questions.
As always it is up to the buyer to understand how he is going to use what he buys. Unfortunately the new comer often lacks the knowledge of all the variable involved in selecting a good TT and TV combination.
We must be willing to get rid of the life we've planned,
so as to have the life that is waiting for us.
โJun-20-2015 10:24 AM
โJun-20-2015 10:22 AM
โJun-20-2015 09:49 AM
rbpru wrote:
After reading some of these posts, I find it amazing that people expect the dealers to know what they are going to haul.
The car dealer looked at my F-150 E-boost 4x4 and said the spec. sheet say it will tow 9500 lbs. He has no idea what the max cargo is on any particular truck is, he can guess it will be between 1200 and 1600 lbs. So as far as he knows a 9500 lb. TT with 1150 lbs. of tongue weight is within spec.
What he does not know is I haul a truck cap, dog, canoe etc. or about 600 lbs. plus of stuff in my TV before I add the tongue weight. If I mention that to the dealer they will be glad to sell be an F-250.:W
Likewise the TT dealer. Letโs say, you want a particular trailer, the dealer looks at the spec sheet and gives you the dry weight. He might suggest you will have about 1000 lbs. of gear.
In reality he has seen dozens of happy campers plop a 7000 lb. dry weight TT on the back of a half-ton pick-up and go blissfully on their way. Again the dealer has no way of knowing how much or how balanced your load will be.
The dealerโs job is to show and sell you the product you want. He assumes you know or have a reasonable knowledge of your desired purchase and is not going to grill you with a bunch of questions.
As always it is up to the buyer to understand how he is going to use what he buys. Unfortunately the new comer often lacks the knowledge of all the variable involved in selecting a good TT and TV combination.