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Whats a good vehicle to tow a 16ft trailer with a Z on it?


josh817

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In the US there is a sum total closely approximating 0 of what you describe.

 

Pity, the twin cam 2.5 liter Nissan turbo diesel puts out as much torque and at lower revs than their four liter twin cam V6 gasoline engine does. Friend of mine has towed his 240Z on a tandem trailer at say 65mph for nearly 24 hours straight with his dual cab.

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I had the D21 Navara LWB ute with the longer bed, single cab. with the SD23 diesel engine and column shift it would haul plenty and had good towing once I got rid of the stock 14" rims with skinny hard 175LT tyres and fitted some Isuzu Bighorn (Trooper II stateside) 15" rims with 205/65R15 semi-performance passenger car tyres.

 

Isuzu and Nissan use the same 6 lug pattern and nut threading if you have a 6 lug nissan pickup and want some different rims. the older late 80's Isuzu trooper rims here look nicer :D

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There are plenty of people here that clamor for small diesel powered pickups, but the auto company bean counters seem to think that it wouln't be profitable. The only two on the horizon that promise to sell small diesel pickups within the next few years are Mahindra (if the stars align correctly) and Jeep who recently announced a diesel pickup of their own.

 

A brief summary of the other diesel equipped light trucks and smallish SUVs in the U.S.:

'02-'06 Jeep Liberty – 2.8L common rail turbodiesel w/ 160 hp

Unimog – yeah, good luck finding one

'83-'85 Mitsubishi Mighty Max / Dodge D50 – 2.3L turbodiesel w/ 80-86 hp

'82-'85 Mazda B2200 / Ford Ranger – 2.2L non-turbo w/ 59 hp

'81-'87 Isuzu P'up / Chevrolet LUV - Isuzu 2.2L non-turbo w/ 58 hp and turbo

International Scout w/ Nissan SD33 non-turbo and turbo (IH stopped producing passenger vehicles in 1980)

'84-'86 Isuzu Trooper – 2.2L turbodiesel

'82-'85 2WD Datsun/Nissan 720 - SD22 w/ 61 hp and SD25 w/ 76 hp both non-turbo

'81-'86 Toyota Pickups - 2.2-2.4L w/ 62 hp and 83 hp respectively

'84-'87 Jeep Cherokee - Renault 2.1L turbodiesel w/ 85 hp

 

This is basically the latest in diesel small pickup technology here:

blacktailgate.jpg

yep...

Edited by blue72
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Bean count this:

My Frontier gets 16mpg at 80mph with nothing in it.

The EXACT SAME Navara with the 2.7 or 3.0DI Diesel does it for 35+mpg.

 

Towing? The Diesels kill hands down. Our distributor in Manila has a fleet of D21 Navaras (which was getting to me, since they are 2007 models, which are identical to my 2000 none of the fancy funky upgrades!) and love them. Nice clear lens H4 Lights (in Italy, our guys have D21's with the LOAD ADJUSTABLE HID Headlights!), plenty of torque for towing portable compressors to the jobsite, and great fuel economy.

 

Don't get me started on what vehicles are available outside the USA. Total political B.S.

 

The FORD RANGER (the mini) is available with a Diesel worldwide, EXCEPT in the USA. (maybe not in Canada either, don't know...)

 

It boggles my mind but I have a good idea it has something to do with B.S trade tariffs and more B.S. emissions laws. The world got Crew Cab 720's and Hardbodies, it took until Y2K to get them in a small pickup here in the USA. DUUUUH! Now they are everywhere. Imagine that, people want a back seat to carry the grown or medium sized adult occasionally, and don't want to make them sit sideways on a jump seat for 5 hours drive across the desert. What a concept, convienience and multiple purposes for a truck. 6 foot bed? Not like I carry lumber every day. But it's plenty big for four L28's...

 

If I could containerize one and VINSWAP I'd be on it in a minute. Then again, I already have one, but the engine swap is a total PITA.

 

I'm tempted to go on my 2003 Air Cooled Beetle for $6500 rant again, but Ill save it this time...

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I'm with Tony and the others regarding a small/mid-sized pickup. Here's what I want for the new shop truck:

 

Extended cab pickup with an 8' bed.

2WD auto trans.

5,000 lb. towing capacity.

4 cylinder turbo diesel engine.

 

That kind of vehicle doesn't exist here but can be found everywhere else including the north pole and Antarctica. WTF?

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Alright guys seriously. I've been looking and I can find Chevy S10's all day long CHEAP. Trying to avoid the V6 but the 4 cylinder looks good with "28MPG". Not too worried if its sluggish, no mountains over here. I just need to be able to stop.

 

Looking at trailers and I see electric brake drums are $50 each and the controller is around $100. I can put brakes on a trailer for $300? Sounds like a breeze. I'm still reading up on how it works though. With this electric setup it looks like you just wire the controller up to the brake pedal light switch or something and then it relays it out to the drums. Drums have a magnet in it, still can't figure that out, and somehow it applies enough pressure to stop.

 

Whatever the case may be, should I have brakes on both axles or is that overkill?

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Alright guys seriously. I've been looking and I can find Chevy S10's all day long CHEAP. Trying to avoid the V6 but the 4 cylinder looks good with "28MPG". Not too worried if its sluggish, no mountains over here. I just need to be able to stop.

 

Looking at trailers and I see electric brake drums are $50 each and the controller is around $100. I can put brakes on a trailer for $300? Sounds like a breeze. I'm still reading up on how it works though. With this electric setup it looks like you just wire the controller up to the brake pedal light switch or something and then it relays it out to the drums. Drums have a magnet in it, still can't figure that out, and somehow it applies enough pressure to stop.

 

Whatever the case may be, should I have brakes on both axles or is that overkill?

 

I think the controller you mention is wired into the cab of the truck and allows you to adjust the brake force and ramp up rate. This is the one I use on the truck:

 

https://www.southwestwheel.com/store/showproduct.aspx?ProductID=4752&SEName=tekonsha-voyager

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Yah that looks like what I was seeing. You mount it inside the cab. On the website it was saying they had two different kind. The type that ramps up at whatever rate you want and the type that has a momentum sensor which applies the brakes more evenly relative to your stopping. From all the install videos I see you basically just wire it up (4 wires) and a 10 gauge wire goes to the trailer to the drums. I assume that's all you need, the drums and the controlled but it sounds too easy.

 

The type I'm use to is the pressure sensor in the trailer hitch/neck. Only problem with that is when you reverse you'd need a lockout.

 

The website I was using is etrailer.com

 

http://www.etrailer.com/tv-demo_trailer_brakes_and_wiring.aspx

Edited by josh817
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i think that what you will find is that anything with a small motor will get 13-17 mpg towing on level ground.a late model chevy with 4.8 or 5.3 will get the same and have power to pull around trucks.if you get a small truck with an auto trans dont exxpect it to last long.it just gets down to how often and what kind of terrain you are towing on.if you only have a track event 4 or 5 times a year and its all flat freeway there a small truck will work .anything else will cause excess wear on the little truck.i used to do side work repairing boats and towed the with a 1988 ford ranger with a 2.9v6.it got 14 mpg while towing at 65mph.the is no way anything will break 20 or even 18 mpg loaded

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I don't care about fuel economy when towing. I only care when I'm daily driving, so yes it will be my daily car too. Events aren't that frequent and when they are I can't afford to spend $300 every other weekend. I was also thinking about the wear and tear on a little truck. I could see transmissions dying and rear ends. If I got a small truck I'd probably have to invest in a bigger tranny oil cooler and stuff unless if it came with some sort of tow package. I'm just having a really hard time down grading from 35-40MPG on my little beater Honda to... 25MPG max on a truck?

 

I don't have a light switch throttle foot. I'm usually really good about coasting and gently getting up to speed. I know that's important when you have a big honkin' motor/truck combo.

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  • 1 month later...

Ive used 2 different vehicles for long haul trips with my Z and trailer.

Biggest factor: Is your trailer open or enclosed. How much wind drag?

Mine is open flatbed,tandem axle with electric brakes on one axle. Tekonsha voyager works great and easy to wire in.

I also use an equalizer hitch. 140kph steady as a rock.

My 92 s10 Blazer 2WDpost-3342-003128200 1292556658_thumb.jpg with 4.3 auto works fine and gets about 20mpg average while hauling on a long run.

The 94 Buick Roadmaster loaded with the family makes the ride like a living room couch and keeps everybody happy!

Fuel economy is about the same while towing. It will go like a rocket if you want to be leader of the pack!

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