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How much does your race car and Trailer weigh?
SuperOwen - December 20th, 2012 at 10:55 AM

Hi, just trying to get an idea of how much most peoples towing combinations weigh. Basically the combined weight of a simple car trailer and a typical VW drag car.

Just trying to work out what size car I can get away with buying to make the trip from Wollongong to Warwick etc safely plus few trips to WSID and still be an economical everyday car. I'll probably build the trailer myself so I'll try and keep it light, single axle if possible with suspension.
Thanks!


Craig Torrens - December 20th, 2012 at 11:13 AM

you'd want a tow vehicle with a 1200kg tow rating min.

My single axle trailer was 240kg BARE when i registered it.....but when you add the ramps, toolbox, spare wheel etc its up around 350kg.


dangerous - December 20th, 2012 at 11:35 AM

Yeah I would agree with Craig, mine is about the same.
Once you start getting closed in trailers and stuff like that you can add 800kg!

To give you some other things to consider,
my old land cruiser was about 2 tons and had about 100kw.
It was great on the road, but another 20kw would have helped on the hills.
So even if the towing capacity is rated well,
make sure you have enough KW.


2442supercharged - December 20th, 2012 at 11:39 AM

my vx ss manual is better on fuel than my brothers ba xr6 towing and just goes up hills easy but not that great around town


humpty - December 20th, 2012 at 04:09 PM

The trailer I built a couple of years back is a heavy mofo at 350kg.... My 2.5ltr Forester tows it pretty well, but a turbo Forester would be that much better.... It's limit is 1400kg (braked).... So with the car and all the gear I reckon I'm getting close to the cars limit....

On the run to Warwick earlier this year, I caught a lift with Ben R in his dads Disco.... He was dragging a pretty heavy looking trailer (400-450kg maybe?) that I think a few guys here have owned in the past.... It did a pretty good job of towing the Orange M&M, three adults and one child and out collective crap, and prolly another 150kg of race gear.... I reckon he did a pretty good job of keeping up with Dave R and his Buggy through the twisty mountain roads!!!!


Craig Torrens - December 20th, 2012 at 04:26 PM

Have you thought about just hiring a car for when you need to tow ?


vw54 - December 20th, 2012 at 05:05 PM

Quote:

Have you thought about just hiring a car for when you need to tow ?



I have tried that a few times but most hire cars DONT have tow bars maybe some of the 4WD hire places have them ( havent inviistigated ) but avis n the like dont have cars with Tow bars


whathaveidone - December 20th, 2012 at 05:11 PM

Gees your lucky my dad isnt on here Humpty!!!!!!! Its a defender not a disco!!!!! He could quite possibly kill you for that slip!!!!
The landy did an awesome job but not that practicle around town.When i have to get a tow car im leaning towards a ford teretry.


Stanley - December 20th, 2012 at 05:29 PM

When originally built my trailer the tow car had a towing capacity of 1000kgs. So once I knew car weight I knew what I had for trailer. Made it with 40kgs to spare. Mind you this didn't include tools spares etc. I only used it tow 40kms to Willowbank. New Outlander has 1200kg capacity but same engine as old car but seems more than capable of towing. February will tell. Might need a few fuel stops though.


rose - December 20th, 2012 at 06:32 PM

Car trailer 420kg the 56 bug weighs 710kg, 54 drag bug a bit lighter. The petrol Hilux tows all the bugs and loaded up with heaps of crap with ease, no worries at all getting up the hills and overtaking as well tows great and does the speed limit.

The Hilux SR5 4wd auto weighs 2ton & 175kw.
Maximum Towing Mass (braked trailer) 2250kg

When towing it uses around 14ltrs/100klms and when not towing just over 10ltr/100 and it drives just like a car, heaps of power to go when you want it to go.
We have used it for towing everywhere to Portland Vic twice, Sydney, Wakefield heaps of times and Warwick heaps of times and Brisbane use it to tow everywhere it's great


SuperOwen - December 20th, 2012 at 06:44 PM

Thanks, all those answers a big help. Now time to vehicle shopping...


Craig Torrens - December 20th, 2012 at 06:44 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by Stanley
. New Outlander has 1200kg capacity but same engine as old car but seems more than capable of towing.


The new 2013 model is now rated at 1600kg and 2000kg for the AWD models..........thats a good load capacity for a medium SUV.


grinderman - December 20th, 2012 at 07:10 PM

Looking at a skoda yeti 4 motion with 2 lt TDI for same reason. Comfy and economical everyday car with 1600kg tow limit which should tow most things I need to. I just did a 3800km trip to victoria to pick up my daughters fastback in a borrowed 2 year old hilux turbo diesel, and lets just say 'never again'. I dont know why hiluxes sell so well unless everyone is 5 foot tall and married to a chiropractor.


sauron - December 21st, 2012 at 07:08 AM

I love my T4, 2.5lt. 5cyl. petrol on gas. I use it every day for work and family and it tows the race car no problems. I get 350 km per tank (50ltr) and you can sleep in it. It's a bit slow up those hills going to Sydney but is comfy and reliable (560,000kms and still going strong). Michael


HappyDaze - December 21st, 2012 at 07:11 AM

T5 is good for towing......ask Rod.;)


SuperOwen - December 21st, 2012 at 08:13 AM

T5's might be a little bit out of my price range, I'd love one otherwise. I'm afraid Rod would suggest something small, economical and underpowered like for instance....a Hummer :crazy:


BiX - December 21st, 2012 at 09:06 AM

I am going through the same thing, thinking about the next car for towing, though the bug is a super and track not drag, so probably pushing closer to 900kg + trailer + gear

Really only 2 options at the moment CX5 or Tiguan. 1800kg and 2000kg respectively. The cx5 desiel has 125kw and 400nm which is pretty good.

I have towed some large boats (pushing 2t or more fully loaded with 2 weeks of food) with a falcon or and a old 2.6l petrol pajero. Would not want to try again. But again allot of it comes back to how well the trailer tows and you drive to the load/conditions.


dangerous - December 21st, 2012 at 09:31 AM

Quote:
Originally posted by BiX
I am going through the same thing, thinking about the next car for towing, though the bug is a super and track not drag, so probably pushing closer to 900kg + trailer + gear

Really only 2 options at the moment CX5 or Tiguan. 1800kg and 2000kg respectively. The cx5 desiel has 125kw and 400nm which is pretty good.

I have towed some large boats (pushing 2t or more fully loaded with 2 weeks of food) with a falcon or and a old 2.6l petrol pajero. Would not want to try again. But again allot of it comes back to how well the trailer tows and you drive to the load/conditions.


I looked at that option too, and the VW was woeful(?) in its KW rating,
despite the diesel's 2000kg towing rating.
Even the New amarok was a really poor kW/ton number.
My choice would have been the CX5 except I need a bit more space in the back.

It IS nice to have all wheel drive too,
especially if you need to move around on wet grass.
Even if you never go off road.

The other option I considered was the new diesel forester or Outback.


HappyDaze - December 21st, 2012 at 09:39 AM

For towing, nm numbers are more important than kw numbers.


ian.mezz - December 21st, 2012 at 09:59 AM

I work in the auto trade.
I would keep away from the new green diesel cars and 4wd
I read so much bad stuff on running cost and problems..
blocked up manifolds, particulate filters, and injector troubles.
nothing is serviceable and have to replace complete units.
some parts cost $6000..


dangerous - December 21st, 2012 at 01:25 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by HappyDaze
For towing, nm numbers are more important than kw numbers.


I would agree to a point.
Torque is about doing the work.
KW is about how fast you can do the work.

A ferguson tractor can do the work.:lol:


SuperOwen - December 21st, 2012 at 03:42 PM

I'm not sure the ferguson would suit my needs as a daily driver unfortunately. Would make parking at uni a breeze though....


humpty - December 21st, 2012 at 03:57 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by whathaveidone
Gees your lucky my dad isnt on here Humpty!!!!!!! Its a defender not a disco!!!!! He could quite possibly kill you for that slip!!!!



Tomater, Tomarta.... :kiss:

Quote:
Originally posted by SuperOwen
I'm not sure the ferguson would suit my needs as a daily driver unfortunately. Would make parking at uni a breeze though....


And how cool would it be to rock up to an event on one?:lol:


HappyDaze - December 21st, 2012 at 04:12 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by dangerous

A ferguson tractor can do the work.:lol:

And they are a lovely shade of grey.:cool:


dragvw2180 - December 21st, 2012 at 08:06 PM

I have pulled my race car and trailers with everything from an Oldsmobile Toronado to a Ford f350 dually diesel. For me it was pretty easy to pull a trailer , but stopping in an emergency condition is where the proper vehicle shows up. Too light of tow vehicle with too light braking system is a formula for disaster. A few years ago I was returning from a race down at Gainsville Fla when someone caused an accident in front of me . Cars were going everywhere and I had to panic stop , I barely got it stopped without hitting anyone or losing control . My next vehicle was much heavier with BIG brakes . Be safe, Mike


HappyDaze - December 21st, 2012 at 08:49 PM

Very important point, Mike.....something that is often overlooked. My trailer has electric brakes, and when adjusted correctly, are very useful in a 'big' stop.


Stanley - December 21st, 2012 at 11:44 PM

Quote:
Originally posted by HappyDaze
Very important point, Mike.....something that is often overlooked. My trailer has electric brakes, and when adjusted correctly, are very useful in a 'big' stop.


And not only does the trailer have to stop but the car on it has to stop too. Think very carefully about tie down points when you build your trailer. Also take into account the force your car (load) puts on the draw bare under heavy braking.


SuperOwen - December 22nd, 2012 at 06:47 AM

Thanks, all good points to consider!


1303Steve - December 22nd, 2012 at 09:16 AM

Hi

I cant praise electric brakes enough, its so reasurring to to be able to settle the trailer when coming down a hill with a flick of the trailer brakes.

Steve


humpty - December 22nd, 2012 at 06:05 PM

I have cable brakes on my single axle trailer, with 1500 leaf springs and a very long 2mtr drawbar made of 90mm thick wall RHS.... It works exceedingly well, but Mike's point about vehicle is extremely valid.... Sure wish I could afford a heavier tow car.