Who tows with a 4x4 & why?

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Discussion

hot metal

Original Poster:

2,017 posts

207 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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I have noticed these days a large number of caravaners tow with 4x4`s ,pick up truck or MPV`s, I am just wondering why.

A caravan is a large wobbly thing that wants to fall over, the above mentioned vehicles are all large wobbly things that want to fall over, so putting the two together does not make sense to me.

Can someone please explain the logic / physics / sense of this to me, I am not trying to be funny, I have driven a great many of the aforementioned rides ,even a Range Rover Sport needs all it can muster to keep itself upright let alone the others.

Pedro Raynard

109 posts

122 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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A number of reasons, from my experience. Currently towing with an X5 having moved from saloons and estates.

Towing wisdom is that the caravan needs to be no more than 85% the weight of the car. Although legally it can be 100% I believe. Therefore the heavier the tow vehicle the more stable the set up is. This is bore out by my experience.

Although the soft suspension may mean a 4x4 is more likely to turn over when the caravan does. A car is more likely remain upright, although with the rear wheels off the ground with the caravan on its side. With a heavy tow car you are much less likely to get into problems, unless of course you feel safe and then start pushing the boundaries by travelling much quicker.

Modern caravans have stability control, which when the caravan starts weaving will momentary apply the brakes of the caravan, this tends to pull everything back into line and forces weight onto the rear wheels of the car and reduces speed. Very effective in my experience.

So weight advantage is the simple answer +

Nose weight on the tow bar. Generally at 75 - 100Kg load is required. With a car loaded fully with all the paraphernalia, kids and bikes on roof, the rear is dragging on the floor and at the bottom of suspension travel. Not too good in my experience.

X5 rear is air suspension.

Other advantages:-
4x4 can have its advantages, no wheel spin when pulling away from a standing and perhaps a little more grip on surfaces other than tarmac (tyres depending).

When changing caravan I don't need to be on hand to give advice to Mrs Raynard about the suitability of the weight match. Therefore she can have whatever she wants without the need to consider the size of the tow car. It's all covered.

Pedro.

Bill

55,542 posts

269 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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You're also not going to drive like your hair's in fire, so there's no point compromising on comfort.

anonymous-user

68 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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I use a landrover for heavy towing because it has 4 wheel drive for wet or muddy fields, has stiff suspension, standard heavy duty clutch and deep gearing. It isn’t wibbly wobbly unless heavily loaded.

littlebasher

3,879 posts

185 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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Doesn't hurt when pulling a caravan off a muddy field either...

Although i've mainly towed with 4x4's, my best towcar was a convertible !

TTmonkey

20,911 posts

261 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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So many obvious reasons for towing with a large heavy, torque rich vehicle, I can’t see the point in the question frankly.

dave_s13

13,908 posts

283 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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Single axle Vs twin axle van makes a huge difference as well.

I had a lightweight (sub 1000kg) 5 berth single axle and now have a twin (circa 1800kg fully loaded) and the single was all over the place compared to the twin.

Current tow vehicle is a new shape ford galaxy. FWD...not been caught short yet although 4wd would be a nice thing to have.

Jim on the hill

5,106 posts

204 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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TTmonkey said:
So many obvious reasons for towing with a large heavy, torque rich vehicle, I can’t see the point in the question frankly.
OP dislikes SUV's and thought he'd found a clever thing to say

dave_s13

13,908 posts

283 months

Sunday 13th February 2022
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It is rather an odd question.

Other than pick ups, which seem to becoming popular lifestyle vehicles.

4x4s, MPVs and SUVs are the perfect tow car. As you'll probably have a load of stuff, kids, bikes and the dog with you.

It won't work in a Toyota Aygo.

hot metal

Original Poster:

2,017 posts

207 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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Jim on the hill said:
OP dislikes SUV's and thought he'd found a clever thing to say
Where as you didn`t...........

I think something like an Audi A6 quattro would be perfect or A4 or anything of this size. No one here has given a good reason for using a tall vehicle ,

relying on the improvement of the caravans to justify it is not good enough , vast majority of towing accidents involve 4x4 `s..

anonymous-user

68 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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hot metal said:


I think something like an Audi A6 quattro would be perfect or A4 or anything of this size. No one here has given a good reason for using a tall vehicle ,

relying on the improvement of the caravans to justify it is not good enough , vast majority of towing accidents involve 4x4 `s..
The main problem with a car is that they are not necessarily optimised for use with a trailer, whereas most larger 4x4s and 2wd vans are. Tall vehicles are not necessarily unstable either, the days of things like Range Rovers wallowing are long gone. Even most pickups have perfectly good handling even if the ride quality is a bit agricultural.

If I was choosing a good towing vehicle I would look for, a torquey engine, probably a diesel, a long wheelbase for stability and robust transmission. Really hefty vehicles like the Landcruiser VX or the Discovery 4 were popular with plant firms, because they were good for heavy towing, most use crewcab pickups these days. Probably overkill for towing a caravan, but nice to be on top of the job as farmers say.

hot metal

Original Poster:

2,017 posts

207 months

Monday 14th February 2022
quotequote all
Newarch said:
The main problem with a car is that they are not necessarily optimised for use with a trailer, whereas most larger 4x4s and 2wd vans are. Tall vehicles are not necessarily unstable either, the days of things like Range Rovers wallowing are long gone. Even most pickups have perfectly good handling even if the ride quality is a bit agricultural.

If I was choosing a good towing vehicle I would look for, a torquey engine, probably a diesel, a long wheelbase for stability and robust transmission. Really hefty vehicles like the Landcruiser VX or the Discovery 4 were popular with plant firms, because they were good for heavy towing, most use crewcab pickups these days. Probably overkill for towing a caravan, but nice to be on top of the job as farmers say.
Granted, plenty of sensible folk on here, Mr Reynard makes a good argument but,,, not everyone is looking to spend north of 6 figures on their combo. I recently saw a twin axle van being towed by a Qasqai , pretty poor, and there are still many who mothball the HUGE Mitsubishi 4x4 until the summer, 1980`s vintage most often, I just think these are a danger to the public.

Jim on the hill

5,106 posts

204 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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hot metal said:
Jim on the hill said:
OP dislikes SUV's and thought he'd found a clever thing to say
Where as you didn`t...........

I think something like an Audi A6 quattro would be perfect or A4 or anything of this size. No one here has given a good reason for using a tall vehicle ,

relying on the improvement of the caravans to justify it is not good enough , vast majority of towing accidents involve 4x4 `s..
Something odd about someone with a TVR complaining others don't use the technically most optimal tool for the job biggrin

TTmonkey

20,911 posts

261 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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Current tow car of the year is the Skoda superb estate. However, over the last 7 years, the majority of TCOTY have been SUVs. Volvos and Skodas, and one shout for a discovery.

So I think I’ll stick with the experts. If money was no worry, it would be a decent sized SUVfor me.

Rosscow

9,167 posts

177 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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We had (until just before Christmas) a twin axle Ace Jubilee with a MIRO of around 1730kg if I remember correctly.

For the first 4 years we towed it with our Audi A6 3.0 TDI Quattro, which also had self levelling rear suspension.

We then replaced the Audi with a VW Touareg, again 3.0 TDI 4WD but obviously a heavier vehicle.

The Audi had a towing limit of 1900kg, and a nose weight limit of around 90kg (I think).

The VW is 3500kg and 140kg respectively.

The Audi was a good tow car, but it was pretty much at it's limit. I did have one scary moment on the way home from the Loire fully loaded when I went past a lorry on the outskirts of Rouen where the tail started to wag the dog! The Audi towing safety alarm kicked in and all was well (was going about 70mph so more than likely my fault!).

The VW however oozes confidence and is so effortless. It doesn't have rear air suspension though so isn't quite as smooth as the Audi was.

I certainly know what I'd choose to tow a large caravan with, though!

hot metal

Original Poster:

2,017 posts

207 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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A Touareg is better than the average 4x4, I do not tow anymore, got a motorhome, but my first tow car was a Cavalier, then a Mondeo , then a Galaxy.
The Galaxy was ok, low centre of gravity but was no where near as good as the previous 2, which surprised me. I stopped towing in 2012 but never had an issue, just remembered the only advice I was ever given on towing `do not speed`.

Plenty of diehard caravaners on here with all the right ideas, all the right equipment but so many still have not a clue .

Big Rat

370 posts

60 months

Monday 14th February 2022
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So I tow with this….



I’m a builder/ landscaper so it’s my work and leisure vehicle, I tow a medium size single axle caravan and yes it’s effortless torque is the deciding factor 3.2 L automatic……is it the ideal tow vehicle I’m not so sure. My BMW M535D was better I’d say more stability lower centre of gravity.




hot metal

Original Poster:

2,017 posts

207 months

Tuesday 15th February 2022
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Big Rat said:
So I tow with this….



I’m a builder/ landscaper so it’s my work and leisure vehicle, I tow a medium size single axle caravan and yes it’s effortless torque is the deciding factor 3.2 L automatic……is it the ideal tow vehicle I’m not so sure. My BMW M535D was better I’d say more stability lower centre of gravity.
You know, I very nearly had one of these, one was offered to me with a recent caravan for 5k less than I paid for my Hymer, there seemed to be all sorts of reasons why I should do this, think it was the wife who tipped it towards the motorhome, no regrets. I used to drive one for work briefly, thought they were pretty good. The lads towed trailers delivering cars on them, could tow greater weights than a flatbed Ducato could carry. One guy even had a long wheel base Sprinter on the trailer once, told him he was stupid though, don`t do it again.

Edited by hot metal on Tuesday 15th February 00:09

Big Rat

370 posts

60 months

Tuesday 15th February 2022
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hot metal said:
You know, I very nearly had one of these, one was offered to me with a recent caravan for 5k less than I paid for my Hymer, there seemed to be all sorts of reasons why I should do this, think it was the wife who tipped it towards the motorhome, no regrets. I used to drive one for work briefly, thought they were pretty good. The lads towed trailers delivering cars on them, could tow greater weights than a flatbed Ducato could carry. One guy even had a long wheel base Sprinter on the trailer once, told him he was stupid though, don`t do it again.

Edited by hot metal on Tuesday 15th February 00:09
It was the reverse for us fella Mrs Rat didn’t want a motor home…..she who must be obeyed…in most things smile Yes I’ve had the Ranger from new 100% reliable been offered more than I paid for it new against another crazy times…..

Tyre Smoke

23,018 posts

275 months

Tuesday 15th February 2022
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In answer to the OP, my Range Rover will tow my twin axle like it's not there. It will also put it exactly where I want it without churning up a load of grass and mud.