โOct-26-2016 04:35 AM
โMar-20-2017 04:50 AM
โMar-19-2017 10:03 PM
camp-n-family wrote:SpeakEasy wrote:camp-n-family wrote:
Don't forget as well that tow ratings reduce pound for pound with weight added to the vehicle. New ratings include 150lbs each for driver and 1 front passenger. Anything else added reduces the tow rating.
Wait. What???
Someone please explain or fact-check this statement.
So you're saying that a vehicle that has a 1700 lb payload capacity and 7000 lb towing capacity ACTUALLY has only a 5300 lb towing capacity if payload is maxed out (7000 minus 1700 = 5300)? That's how I am interpreting what you're saying, but it seems odd at best. Please clarify your meaning.
-Speak
Tow ratings are not calculated with a vehicle maxed out on payload. The new SAE2807 standards calculate the ratings with only a 150lbs driver and a 150lbs passenger. Previous to the 2807 standard coming into effect in the last couple of years, it only included 150lbs for a driver and nothing else.
The vehicle towing has to move the weight no matter if it's in the vehicle or trailer, therefor any weight added to the tv above the allotted standard weight will reduced the amount it is rated to pull, pound for pound. Your example is close. A tv with 1700lbs of payload and a 7000lbs tow rating would have its tow rating reduced to 5600lbs if it was loaded to its gvwr. It's reduced by 1400lbs because 300lbs is already included for driver and passenger using the new SAE2807 standards. (150lbs for each).
โMar-19-2017 07:46 PM
davehultin wrote:
Kinda sounds like a grade-school riddle, right? We recently purchased a trailer with a GVWR of 7700 pounds, and are looking for our next tow vehicle. (No rush yet, we won't need it until spring.)
We had been thinking pickup, and looked at a really nice extended cab GMS Sierra that could do the job, but my wife is favoring a vehicle with three rows.
Friends of ours use a Toyota Sequoia which has three rows for seating and is rated for 9000 pounds. That would work well for us, but there aren't any (used) in our market. Any other vehicles like that I could search for?
โMar-19-2017 06:43 PM
โMar-19-2017 06:32 PM
SpeakEasy wrote:camp-n-family wrote:
Don't forget as well that tow ratings reduce pound for pound with weight added to the vehicle. New ratings include 150lbs each for driver and 1 front passenger. Anything else added reduces the tow rating.
Wait. What???
Someone please explain or fact-check this statement.
So you're saying that a vehicle that has a 1700 lb payload capacity and 7000 lb towing capacity ACTUALLY has only a 5300 lb towing capacity if payload is maxed out (7000 minus 1700 = 5300)? That's how I am interpreting what you're saying, but it seems odd at best. Please clarify your meaning.
-Speak
โMar-19-2017 04:46 PM
โMar-19-2017 04:30 PM
โMar-19-2017 01:31 PM
SpeakEasy wrote:camp-n-family wrote:
Don't forget as well that tow ratings reduce pound for pound with weight added to the vehicle. New ratings include 150lbs each for driver and 1 front passenger. Anything else added reduces the tow rating.
Wait. What???
Someone please explain or fact-check this statement.
So you're saying that a vehicle that has a 1700 lb payload capacity and 7000 lb towing capacity ACTUALLY has only a 5300 lb towing capacity if payload is maxed out (7000 minus 1700 = 5300)? That's how I am interpreting what you're saying, but it seems odd at best. Please clarify your meaning.
-Speak
โMar-19-2017 10:51 AM
SpeakEasy wrote:camp-n-family wrote:
Don't forget as well that tow ratings reduce pound for pound with weight added to the vehicle. New ratings include 150lbs each for driver and 1 front passenger. Anything else added reduces the tow rating.
Wait. What???
Someone please explain or fact-check this statement.
So you're saying that a vehicle that has a 1700 lb payload capacity and 7000 lb towing capacity ACTUALLY has only a 5300 lb towing capacity if payload is maxed out (7000 minus 1700 = 5300)? That's how I am interpreting what you're saying, but it seems odd at best. Please clarify your meaning.
of course its true , people are payload too. every pound is payload they only give you 1 freebee
150# person and the hitch the rest you have to count.
-Speak
โMar-19-2017 10:13 AM
โMar-19-2017 09:54 AM
camp-n-family wrote:
Don't forget as well that tow ratings reduce pound for pound with weight added to the vehicle. New ratings include 150lbs each for driver and 1 front passenger. Anything else added reduces the tow rating.
โMar-19-2017 08:14 AM
โMar-19-2017 07:47 AM
likestrucks wrote:
Go pick up a 2016 Suburban 3500HD from GM Fleet Services. Has a Payload of 4400 lbs. Have found mixed specs on the tow rating with some sites saying as low 3000 which doesn't make sense, but I don't see why it wouldn't tow 10000 pounds. We used to tow a 10000 lbs TT with a 2001 Suburban 2500 with a 6.0 and 4.10.
Edit - Looks like its a Gov and maybe commercial fleet only option to buy. So probably wouldn't be able to get your hands on one of these until they are all used up and sold as surplus.
โMar-18-2017 02:49 PM
โOct-27-2016 01:16 PM