StarEcho
Well-known member
If I'm understanding this correctly, the HITCH rating actually limits what you can pull, right?
For instance, I currently drive a 1500 suburban and it is rated to tow 5500 lbs...it has a class 3 hitch receiver (the part of the hitch welded to the vehicle frame) which limits the tow rating to 5000 lbs without a weight distribution (wd) hitch and 10000 WITH a wd hitch.
We are looking to upgrade our tow vehicle to an actual 3/4 ton or higher truck so that we could potentially carry a side by side in the truck bed while still pulling a trailer.
Found a f-250 long bed that seemed perfect to do the job...specs online said 12500 tow capacity. ...but the dealer's spec sheet said it had a class 3 hitch! So it really can only tow 10000 lbs WITH a wd hitch. Am I right on this?
I'm not talking about tongue weights here ok. I know about those. I'm just irritated that a manufacturer lists the towing capacity of their vehicle as one thing and then puts on a hitch receiver that CANNOT tow that safely. Am I overthinking the whole hitch receiver rating thing?
For instance, I currently drive a 1500 suburban and it is rated to tow 5500 lbs...it has a class 3 hitch receiver (the part of the hitch welded to the vehicle frame) which limits the tow rating to 5000 lbs without a weight distribution (wd) hitch and 10000 WITH a wd hitch.
We are looking to upgrade our tow vehicle to an actual 3/4 ton or higher truck so that we could potentially carry a side by side in the truck bed while still pulling a trailer.
Found a f-250 long bed that seemed perfect to do the job...specs online said 12500 tow capacity. ...but the dealer's spec sheet said it had a class 3 hitch! So it really can only tow 10000 lbs WITH a wd hitch. Am I right on this?
I'm not talking about tongue weights here ok. I know about those. I'm just irritated that a manufacturer lists the towing capacity of their vehicle as one thing and then puts on a hitch receiver that CANNOT tow that safely. Am I overthinking the whole hitch receiver rating thing?