xtremek
Well-known member
Wait, you're thinking of getting rid of a manual transmission? No cruise and no air would kill it for me, but even then I'd struggle to let go of a stick shift.
Wait, you're thinking of getting rid of a manual transmission? No cruise and no air would kill it for me, but even then I'd struggle to let go of a stick shift.
The boss got to drive a new '20 Canyon with the diesel in it a couple of years ago. He was getting the same mileage as my little Saturn, about 35 mpg highway and about 28 around town
I actually kinda like the looks of the Ridgeline. I didn't bother to look for them seriously as I assumed it isn't much of a tow vehicle - not that the Gladiator is all THAt great either but it will suffice.At least it's not a Ridgeline. Most truck buyers today don't want a truck, they want a status symbol. If it works for you, then the rest of us can take a long walk off a short pier. But I was referring to the steering and trans issues.
I totally get what you're saying but none of that applies to my use of a truck. Even when I had my '08 Chevy 3500HD Crew Dually 4x4; though I carried an 11-1/2 ft Lance 1181 slide-in camper (biggest they sold then) and later a 36 ft 5th wheel monster trailer, I never used it hard. I only carried/towed either one of those a few times per year and in between times I pretty much never used it as a truck! Though I used it as one for awhile the dually just wasn't a truck you'd want to use as a daily driver; too damn big to park most places. The Denali I just sold carried a couple of pallets of retaining wall block twice and even then it was set down pretty carefully by the material yard fork lift. I never threw anything in either one's bed. Never carried gravel, etc and both had Linex in the bed. The one time I carried something substantial in the hall was a ginormous roll of used Astroturf type material and it bent the sh!t out of the tailgate. I had to buy a replacement! This little Jeep truck will almost be like a toy for me after the Chevy & GMC trucks. I hope it is a fun truck to own and it'll certainly handle the boat; though I may have to consider a weight distributing hitch.And please don't get me wrong, every car manufacturer has their problems. It's whether they stand behind those problems. But the big issue with me is that I use the box. I have an '03 F-150 Supercrew (5 1/2' box) and the floor of the box is rippled pretty good from throwing stuff in it, so how is Honda's little trunk in the box floor going to stand up. I have the same issue with Dodge's tool box in the side of the box, Ford's aluminum box, or GM's stupid folding tailgate. When I carry an 10"x +10" log over to the truck on my shoulder, it hits the box pretty hard when I drop it.
My boat is a 22 ft Centurion Elite wakeboard boat on a Trailrite dual axle trailer (pic on my old dually - R.I.P.)Yep, I totally get it. How big is the boat? Does Airlift make a kit for it? You pulled a few things. We bought a travel trailer (30' I think) that I'm going to pull with the Girlfriend ('82 c30). Do you think a weight equalizing hitch is something I should do?
That is where an 'weight equalization' hitch comes into play, although your suppose to setup the correct tongue weight first. When I setup my equalizer hitch, you actually measure the distance to the ground from the lip of the front fender wells. Then again, once the trailer is hooked up and adjust the spring arms as neededGood to know. I was under the impression that it was the other way around. That if the tongue is too heavy and squats the rear of the vehicle/raises the front the towing vehicle get sketchy steering and losing control can become an issue.
Yes I'm going to look into rear bags for the Gladiator. I'd rather "have them and not need them" than "need them and not have them"! Thanks for the public scale info. I hadn't researched it yet and as you (may) know I'm new to the Glendora area. Been house-bound for a year!The tongue weight needs to be at least 10-15% of the trailer weight. Heavier is better if the towing vehicle and hitch can support it. I run auxiliary air bags in my Jeep LJ for this.
On some is my trailers the tongue weight is in the thousands of pounds
Burtech on Gladstone between Lark Ellen and Vincent in Azusa has a public scale
Ha! Yeah, Bob that MIGHT be an indicator of a problem!!....Only clue was the wheel passing me on the I95 merge lane.
Hmmm, I'm not sure I understand. I've never used a weight distributing hitch before - always had big *** trucks! And I'm not sure I actually need one - my boat weighs either 2,750 or 3,000 lbs depending which site I believe (it's NOT a V-drive which I think adds weight). I don't know what its dual axle Trail Rite trailer weighs but I feel sure it's less than the boat so just guessing 1,500-2,000 lbs? I suppose the real answer is don't guess, load it up as we'll use it and go weigh it.That is where an 'weight equalization' hitch comes into play, although you're suppose to setup the correct tongue weight first. When I setup my equalizer hitch, you actually measure the distance to the ground from the lip of the front fender wells. Then again, once the trailer is hooked up and adjust the spring arms as needed
Take a look at their manual, starting on page 16


Thanks so much Swanny. Your experience helps ease my concern. My feeling is that Trail Rite is a well respected trailer manufacturer and of course Centurion is a very good manufacturer too. I'm certain they set up the boat on the trailer to optimize the tow experience so I had no intention off messing with that. And of course with my '08 Silverado 3500 dually nor my '14 GMC 2500HD weight was never an issue. Remembering I had boat back there was more of an issue! Lol. I do intend to hook up the boat and take a test run on surface streets and freeways and see how it feels. It'd be great if the Weight Distributing Hitch isn't necessary.Dan,
However, my experience is the trailer manufacturers design the trailer to have the proper tongue weight with the boat positioned in the forward most lock down position as that's the only way to ensure the weight of the boat is positioned properly (each trailer is designed specifically for the boat it is carrying).
Happy to share any additional experience with you. . .
Yikes! Sounds like you used up one of your nine lives, Don! While I was working the Eastside Extension project for Metro we had a car barrel through a road closure and it hit a truck that had a variable message sign board and generator trailer still hitched to it with a worker standing along side. He was saved from being cut in half because the trailer had structural 4x4 angle iron "fenders" sticking out that slammed into the F450 lowboy flatbed towing it. It trapped him for a few minutes but he only got bruises. If the F450 had a pickup bed or the trailer sheet metal fenders it would have crushed him or at least cut off both legs.This may be a good time to share a little towing experience
....BUT on the way down the other side of that hill....the trailer took over and threw that chevy all over the freeway before breaking the 2" ball and slamming into the side of the suburban and jackknifing us in the middle of the road. ....The moral of the story MORE tongue weight.
Yikes! Sounds like you used up one of your nine lives, Don! While I was working the Eastside Extension project for Metro we had a car barrel through a road closure and it hit a truck that had a variable message sign board and generator trailer still hitched to it with a worker standing along side. He was saved from being cut in half because the trailer had structural 4x4 angle iron "fenders" sticking out that slammed into the F450 lowboy flatbed towing it. It trapped him for a few minutes but he only got bruises. If the F450 had a pickup bed or the trailer sheet metal fenders it would have crushed him or at least cut off both legs.
Standing out in a road with live traffic going by? Yeah, my call is a hard “NO!” I’ve seen too many near misses with our crews who weren’t even in the street for more than a few moments with lane closures too. Glad you’ve survived it!As a surveyor I don’t want to think about all of the close calls
Hi Drives! Yeah, this thread has wandered far off in-my-garage “doings”.. But I’ll get back to that soon. Been doing a lot of garden trimming, dead heading, no moving **** around to (tightly) fit the RV & boat into our side yard, etc.Dan i'm sorry i've missed your thread here and now that I've found it i'm here to learn and see what else you want to write about.
I hope you are healthy and ready for another hot summer in So. California.
cheers


