[AT] OT Tires
Brad Gunnells
brad-gunnells at uiowa.edu
Wed Feb 27 07:01:38 PST 2008
It might be worth your time to seek out somewhere with a scale to see
what your tow load really is. If you live in a farming area such as I
do you could swing by the local elevator. They let me weigh my truck
and camper and then truck and boat so I knew what the loads were.
Many truck stops have scales also but would probably charge a fee to
use them.
Given the seat of the pants feel (I haven't weighed my tractor
trailer) to get it moving from a stop the boat and trailer (3600#s)
weights quite a bit more than my tractor trailer. This is one of
those Wally-Mo type 16' utility trailers.
Unless he's got a gooseneck or extremely heavy built trailer for his
tractors I wouldn't think the 14' trailer weighs 3000#s.
But again a scale is the real way to know where you stand vs. your
tow vehicles ratings.
Brad
On Feb 26, 2008, at 10:41 PM, Rob Wilson wrote:
> Even with the 7,000 lb towing capacity rating that only leaves
> about 3,000
> lbs and the trailer probably weighs that much doesn't it? The 2001
> is only
> rated around 5,000 if I recall correctly. With all the crack downs
> on guys
> hauling tractors I just wouldn't want to see you get ticketed or
> worse.
> Rob
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com
> [mailto:at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com] On Behalf Of
> rlgoss at insightbb.com
> Sent: Tuesday, February 26, 2008 11:11 PM
> To: Antique tractor email discussion group
> Subject: Re: [AT] OT Tires
>
> It isn't the same, Rob. The 2005 and later is a much different
> vehicle from
> the 2001. And a truck that is set up for towing is totally
> different from a
> minivan with a camper behind it. I agree with you, that 2001
> Dakota isn't a
> towing vehicle.
>
> Larry
>
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