Feb-02-2015 11:55 AM
Feb-03-2015 12:54 PM
TomG2 wrote:If you need a 3/4 T to tow your trailer, Go For It. As long as I am operating within my vehicles specs, that's all I need. If that means a 1/2T will do the job, than that's one tool of many that works. Unless of course you want to pay the freight than by all means tell me which of the tools to use.
This has nothing to do with them unloaded, only when both are towing 7,000 pounds and the electric brakes on the trailer fail to perform perfectly. Which brakes will have more capacity? Those on the 10,000 gvwr pickup or on the 7,500 pound gvwr model? Take a look at them sometime.
Feb-03-2015 12:41 PM
marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:
Towing with a semi isn't a totally trollish statement?
GFY
Feb-03-2015 12:24 PM
Dreenn wrote:
Like the title says I have read many posts that basically suggest that towing a 30ish foot Tt with a 1/2 ton truck is wrong and your going to Indanger your family and anyone around you on the road that said I have a few questions
I just bought a 30foot Tt dry weight is 5200 loaded is 7500 I believe by the manufacture sticker I am towing it with a 2014 gmc 1500.
I looked up max tow rating on my gmc in the manual and used my window sticker for refers to what was equipped it said max was 9600 pounds now looking at my door sticker I don't see 9600 pounds anywhere on it am I missing something?? Or is my truck rated to tow a lot less then what the manual says
Sorry for the poor grammar typing on my cell phone
Feb-03-2015 12:20 PM
Feb-03-2015 12:13 PM
Feb-03-2015 12:09 PM
Feb-03-2015 11:59 AM
wing_zealot wrote:
Another couple of pages and we'll be way past needing a diesel dually to tow a popup.
Feb-03-2015 11:42 AM
Feb-03-2015 11:38 AM
wing_zealot wrote:
Another couple of pages and we'll be way past needing a diesel dually to tow a popup.
Feb-03-2015 11:21 AM
Feb-03-2015 11:17 AM
marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:Terryallan wrote:marcsbigfoot20b27 wrote:3oaks wrote:
Yea, doesn't everyone know nothing less than a 350 dully is safe to tow anything. :R
Towing over 6000 lbs is a matter of.....
1/2 ton = good
3/4 ton = better
1 ton dually = best
Tow the same trailer with a 1 ton dually and get back to us.
F450 even better,
F650 even better
A 10 wheeled 35000lb over the road Freightliner would be even better. but NOT needed.
If folks are scared to tow a little over 6000lb with a F150. I would suggest a Freightliner. No sway, good braking, won't be pushed around by the TT. You won't even know it is there. Try it, and get back to us
1/2 ton, 3/4 ton and 1 ton are the normal trucks you see on the road. Your reply is trollish.
I beg to differ..the reply is NOT Trollish. It simply points out your very faulty logic.
Better is not necessarily the same as Bigger. There are many other considerations.
Towing with a semi isn't a totally trollish statement?
GFY
If GFY means what I think it does then your vocabulary is on a par with your Logic. (Both bad)
It makes one wonder why someone would take this so very personally as you do to write that over this issue?
I take driving and towing a heavy TT seriously/"personally". I don't want a 1/2 ton that is just 100 lbs under max weight to rear end me because itt can't stop going down a big mountain, lose control when a semi passes it and it swerves across the median causing a head on or just crashes in a ditch killing themselves.
If people here have never towed with more than a 1/2 ton then they don't have any experience to post any meaningful info about the differences with 3/4 or 1 ton.
Feb-03-2015 11:12 AM
Feb-03-2015 10:25 AM
Huntindog wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:
Those that are enamored of the numbers printed on the stickers in their truck need to remember where they come from.
The design rating is given to the engineers as a goal to reach. The engineers design it to have a 1.5 times safety factor AT MINIMUM.
Then the LAWYERS decide how much of that ACTUAL design limit gets to be stated on the stickers and the manual and the brochure. This figure is often a significant de-rating from the ACTUAL load capacity.
Why? because it is "Legal Head Room" just in case they have to defend themselves in court. They want to be able to say that the design of the truck was significantly better than the published data and therefore the Failure in question is not the fault of the Manufacturer.
What does this mean for the average truck owner/buyer?
Simple; the numbers you all quote as Pure Unassailable GOSPEL that should never be exceeded are in reality Meaningless. These numbers have very little to do with the reality of what you can and cannot carry or tow but what the MFG wants you to think you can carry/tow.
This legal protection has the added benefit of driving customers UP MARKET into the ever more profitable larger and more expensive trucks.
Not a bad game for the Truck Manufacturers.
A little more skepticism and a lot less credulity where these numbers are concerned is definitely needed.
Finally; To the Best of my knowledge no impartial third party has ever tested the actual-Real-World capabilities of these trucks and what they can carry and tow. And I dont mean the self serving "reviews" of the truck Mags...but actual scientific testing. And until this is done please do not continue to claim that a 3/4 ton truck is by default SAFER that a 1/2 ton or an SUV. There are too many factors involved.
This some interesting thinking... What are your sources? Why does the same not apply to tires?
Do the Tire engineers and lawyers go to different schools? Their concerns should be the same,,,, right?
Feb-03-2015 10:20 AM
4X4Dodger wrote:
Those that are enamored of the numbers printed on the stickers in their truck need to remember where they come from.
The design rating is given to the engineers as a goal to reach. The engineers design it to have a 1.5 times safety factor AT MINIMUM.
Then the LAWYERS decide how much of that ACTUAL design limit gets to be stated on the stickers and the manual and the brochure. This figure is often a significant de-rating from the ACTUAL load capacity.
Why? because it is "Legal Head Room" just in case they have to defend themselves in court. They want to be able to say that the design of the truck was significantly better than the published data and therefore the Failure in question is not the fault of the Manufacturer.
What does this mean for the average truck owner/buyer?
Simple; the numbers you all quote as Pure Unassailable GOSPEL that should never be exceeded are in reality Meaningless. These numbers have very little to do with the reality of what you can and cannot carry or tow but what the MFG wants you to think you can carry/tow.
This legal protection has the added benefit of driving customers UP MARKET into the ever more profitable larger and more expensive trucks.
Not a bad game for the Truck Manufacturers.
A little more skepticism and a lot less credulity where these numbers are concerned is definitely needed.
Finally; To the Best of my knowledge no impartial third party has ever tested the actual-Real-World capabilities of these trucks and what they can carry and tow. And I dont mean the self serving "reviews" of the truck Mags...but actual scientific testing. And until this is done please do not continue to claim that a 3/4 ton truck is by default SAFER that a 1/2 ton or an SUV. There are too many factors involved.
Feb-03-2015 09:58 AM
4X4Dodger wrote:TomG2 wrote:4X4Dodger wrote:
....snip.......... And until this is done please do not continue to claim that a 3/4 ton truck is by default SAFER that a 1/2 ton or an SUV. There are too many factors involved.
You really think that a half ton pickup with a "Tow rating" of 9,600 pounds is good for that or more? Maybe I read it wrong, but you seem to be saying that the ratings are lowered by the engineers and lawyers?
Yes I do and that is **almost** exactly what I am saying. I said that the ACTUAL DESIGN LOAD is at least 1.5 times higher than the Design SPEC. And that the Design spec is further DE-RATED by the legal department to the numbers you see published so they can have what I called "legal Headroom" in case they must defend their decisions in court.