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Towing with Ecoboost V6

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So if I keep the GVWR around 6000 I should be good? That 4800lb one has a GVWR of 6200.
That "around 6000" should mean 6000 lbs or less. Also, look at the cargo capacity of the truck. You may find that you quickly max out.

Bob
 
Towing skill is not mandated or controlled by the Gov. That is up to you. All you will hear in here and any other forum is you will crash and burn and die in a ball of fire if you exceed the max. You will not get an answer about skills. All I will say is that many have trusted their skill and judgement and not died. Including many in this and other forums.
 
Yeah, I started looking into renting a unit with the same profile as the one I'm looking at and asked a few owners what they tow with. 1 was towing with a Ranger and the other 2 mid-sized SUVs and they say they've never had an issue. So I'm going to rent a couple, tow them around for a while and see how it goes. If I have any issues, then I'll upgrade the truck.
 
Be careful and remember the numbers represent emergency conditions for control of your tow and ride. Not just the ability to get it done. Many things work great on bright clear days with dry smooth roads.
 
I'm on the fence about uprgrading to a 3/4 ton and going with a fifth wheel or keeping my current truck and just getting a travel trailer that I can tow with it. Having no previous RV experience, I just can't see investing an extra $35K in the truck plus and extra $30K bumping up to a fifth wheel until I absolutely know for sure this is going to be something I want to continue doing long term. Plus, I just don't think I'm ready to tow something that size. My current truck is a 2019 Ford F150 4x4 crew cab with 2.7 Ecoboost V6 and 3.55 rear end. The "towing capacity" is 7600lbs with 12900 GCWR. It tows a 4000lb boat with ease, but I know travel trailers are a completely different animal.

So.....the smallest TT that I believe I can make work for what I'm wanting to do is 24'11" and 4800lb dry. The one that I think would be best for what I want is 28'6" and 5900lbs dry. I feel like this may be more that what my truck could consistently handle. So, does anyone have any experience towing with an Ecoboost and have any feedback? With a WDH, can my truck safely handle the larger of these 2 options? I'm fully going into this planning to get 6 months of experience and then possibly upgrade the truck and trailer. I'd rather take a small hit by upgrading in 6 months if I want to keep going vs the big hit of upgrading everything now and then not even wanting to continue full-timing.
I have a 2020 2.7 ecoboost. Towing a 264 grey wolf 6000 pds dry. Does well on level roads. Still need a 3 quarter ton to go up and DOWN mountains. Hope this helps!
 
I have a 2020 2.7 ecoboost. Towing a 264 grey wolf 6000 pds dry. Does well on level roads. Still need a 3 quarter ton to go up and DOWN mountains. Hope this helps!
How well does it stop? How's the stability when it's windy?
 
I have a 2014 3.7 EB with full tow package and 3.73 rear end. We are shopping for our first TT, and based on a ton of feedback, we are electing to limit ourselves to something with a GVW under 5000#. We are admittedly conservative in our estimates, but will be on some less-travelled routes where support will be unavailable. Our mantra is safe over sorry...
IMHO, manufacturers specs and towing capacities are optimistic to promote sales. A friend fell into the numbers trap, and is still recovering from a very expensive truck failure towing "close to" his towing limit, out of country.
 

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