โJun-27-2018 10:08 PM
โJul-04-2018 10:06 PM
camp-n-family wrote:trailer_newbe wrote:
I tow the below trailer with my 2008 CrewMax with the factory tow package. I have installed the TRD sway bar, Bilstein shocks, and Firestone airbags. My truck has a tow rating of 10,400 lbs, with a hitch weight of 1,385. I tow ok, but obviously the trailer came long after the truck. With 55,000 miles on my truck, Iโm going to use it. Salt River Canyon is next, should be fun?
Unless you have an aftermarket hitch, there is no Tundra that has a 1385lbs hitch rating. The 2nd gen Tundras (before the new SAE tow standards) had receivers rated for a max of 10 percent of the tow rating. The highest tow rating for those years was 10,500lb making the max rating 1050lbs.
โJul-04-2018 09:55 PM
trailer_newbe wrote:
I tow the below trailer with my 2008 CrewMax with the factory tow package. I have installed the TRD sway bar, Bilstein shocks, and Firestone airbags. My truck has a tow rating of 10,400 lbs, with a hitch weight of 1,385. I tow ok, but obviously the trailer came long after the truck. With 55,000 miles on my truck, Iโm going to use it. Salt River Canyon is next, should be fun?
โJul-04-2018 06:45 PM
kknowlton wrote:
As a Tundra owner, who has been towing with ours for 11 years now, I think that's a whole lotta trailer for that truck. If the spot you're towing it to was a half hour away on country roads, I'd say you'd be ok, but 5+ hours? I wouldn't do it. Our first TT that we pulled with this truck was a 34' with 7600 GVWR, and we usually loaded it to the max. The truck did ok, but both the truck and I are a LOT happier now with a trailer with 1000# lower GVWR. And the OP says the DRY weight of his TT is over 8000#? Too much trailer. JMHO, from experience.
โJul-04-2018 06:20 PM
โJul-04-2018 09:24 AM
โJun-29-2018 10:58 AM
โJun-29-2018 10:16 AM
โJun-29-2018 07:20 AM
Maury82 wrote:
I could have sworn the OP said he just needed to drive 2 miles to drop the trailer off on his land, and 7 miles to put it away for storage, so how did you come up with this ready to camp, loaded up, wife and kids, dry weight is meaningless, etc.
He just needs to drop an empty trailer off a few miles.
โJun-29-2018 07:10 AM
camp-n-family wrote:camp-n-family wrote:
Sorry but itโs too much trailer for your truck. The tow rating is the last number you should be concerned with as youโll far exceed several other ratings (payload, rawr, tire) first. Once that trailer is loaded and your passengers are on board you will probably exceed the tow rating too.
We towed my current trailer for 2 years with a crewmax Tundra. Itโs 34โ long but only 6400lbs dry. Loaded we are 7600lbs with 950lbs tongue weight. Our Tundra had 1320lbs of payload, yours will be similar. Truck pulled fine but we were pushing it. On average 400lbs over payload and right at the axle ratings. We had upgraded E range tires, airbags, and use a $3k Hensley hitch. I loved that truck and it is overbuilt but what your thinking of towing will not be an enjoyable experience.
Things to consider;
-dry weights are useless, nobody pulls an empty trailer
- max hitch receiver rating is 1050lbs with a wd hitch. You will exceed this.
- You will exceed the payload rating with just the hitch weight and a driver in the truck
A couple hundred pound over wonโt kill the truck but with a crewmax I assume you have a family? You will be way over.
- you will likely exceed the axle and tire ratings
- the tow rating is calculated assuming 150lbs for a driver and 1 passenger on board. Any weight above this added to the truck reduces your tow rating pound for pound. If you have a big family or plan on carrying anything in the truck bed you will exceed this too.
Will it tow it? Yes. Will it be a fun and comfortable experience? Not likely. Do I see a bigger truck in your future? Absolutely. Find a lighter trailer. Been there, done that.
Sorry, just re read your original post. I would tow it home empty without anybody else in the truck with a properly set hitch. I would also tow it 2 miles down the road twice a year without concern. If there is any chance you plan on travelling with the family with it my above post still applies.
โJun-29-2018 06:58 AM
Maury82 wrote:
He said he is wanting to tow a 8,100lbs dry trailer two miles to one location, and seven miles to another location.
826storm wrote:
I have a 2015 5.7 Tundra Crewmax 4x4 with a towing capacity of 9800 lbs. I am strongly considering driving 5 hrs. away this weekend to purchase a 2015 Keystone Sprinter 299RET with a dry weight of 8153#s.
Bobbo wrote:
I agree with everyone else who says it is OK to pick it up and drive it home as long as there is absolutely zero added weight in either the truck or the trailer and you drive slowly. You can also take it to/from nearby storage under those same conditions.
There is no way I would load up the truck and trailer for camping and tow it with that truck. Anywhere.
Maury82 wrote:
The Tundra is overbuilt and just like a 3/4 diesel, it can handle more than its ratings, so for that particular situation you should be fine...Tow it.
โJun-29-2018 06:50 AM
Bobbo wrote:Maury82 wrote:
Taken out of context.
Not overbuilt as meaning like, or equal to a 3/4 diesal, but overbuilt just like a 3/4 is overbuilt.
The Tundra is overbuilt, and I know owners who abuse and over load them on a regular, have higher miles on them, but still have supreme reliability...overbuilt.
The Tundra may very well be over-built. I don't know as I have never owned or driven one. However, advising people who don't know what they are doing, and admit that they don't know what they are doing, to ignore manufacturer ratings is irresponsible, at best. The truck may very well be able to handle that trailer, but if it doesn't, your recommendation to JUST DO IT can lead to injuries or deaths. If someone is going to ignore manufacturer's ratings, they should do so from a position of knowledge, not from a stranger's assurance that it will be OK. It may be fine for you, as the knowledgeable person to tow that trailer, but it is dangerous for anyone else to just take a stranger's word that it is fine.
โJun-29-2018 06:20 AM
โJun-28-2018 07:24 PM
Maury82 wrote:
Taken out of context.
Not overbuilt as meaning like, or equal to a 3/4 diesal, but overbuilt just like a 3/4 is overbuilt.
The Tundra is overbuilt, and I know owners who abuse and over load them on a regular, have higher miles on them, but still have supreme reliability...overbuilt.
โJun-28-2018 06:08 PM