Short version:
If the tow vehicle is rated for 10,000 lbs, and the trailer is rated for 14,000+ lbs GVWR is it still OK to tow if the actual weight of the trailer is, say, 8,500 lbs?
Long version:
What I'd really like to be able to do is get a 2 car trailer and tow it with an M1078. I've read the M1078 has a towing capacity of 10,000 lbs, though, and most 2 car trailers start at 14,000 lbs GVWR (7,000 per axle, virtually all are at least double axle).
The cars I want to tow are 2,600 lbs and 3,200 lbs (measured curb weight). The GVWR is 3,100 and 3,600 respectively.
So, assuming a 2,000 to 2,500 lb trailer, that's just under 8,500 lbs total. Even using GVWR of the in-tow vehicles, that's only 9,200 lbs.
So is it still safe to tow this even though the GVWR of the trailer is over the listed towing capacity of the tow vehicle? More specifically, anything I need to know about towing with an LMTV?
If the tow vehicle is rated for 10,000 lbs, and the trailer is rated for 14,000+ lbs GVWR is it still OK to tow if the actual weight of the trailer is, say, 8,500 lbs?
Long version:
What I'd really like to be able to do is get a 2 car trailer and tow it with an M1078. I've read the M1078 has a towing capacity of 10,000 lbs, though, and most 2 car trailers start at 14,000 lbs GVWR (7,000 per axle, virtually all are at least double axle).
The cars I want to tow are 2,600 lbs and 3,200 lbs (measured curb weight). The GVWR is 3,100 and 3,600 respectively.
So, assuming a 2,000 to 2,500 lb trailer, that's just under 8,500 lbs total. Even using GVWR of the in-tow vehicles, that's only 9,200 lbs.
So is it still safe to tow this even though the GVWR of the trailer is over the listed towing capacity of the tow vehicle? More specifically, anything I need to know about towing with an LMTV?