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Towing with a V6 manual transmission

Discussion in '1st Gen Tundras (2000-2006)' started by ShredBox, Jul 30, 2023.

  1. Jul 30, 2023 at 6:04 AM
    #1
    ShredBox

    ShredBox [OP] New Member

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    So my wife and I have been camping with a class C RV, but are thinking about switching to a travel trailer so that we can unhook and drive around. I have a 2001 access cab Tundra 3.4 with a stick shift. Looking online, I need to keep the weight under 5000 pounds, but I'm tending to think that a manual transmission would mean I might want to go lower. Any bits of advice? And no, I don't want to tow anything with the class c, it's already woefully under-powered.
     
  2. Jul 30, 2023 at 6:34 AM
    #2
    Elevatorguy

    Elevatorguy Yotas and JD Green!

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    Next you’ll be saying the 3.4 is woefully underpowered. Not sure what it’s rated to tow but 5k sounds like way too much. Towing in flatlands or hill country?
     
  3. Jul 30, 2023 at 6:41 AM
    #3
    ShredBox

    ShredBox [OP] New Member

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    Yes, I'm guessing the 3.4 will struggle with something too big. Looking at keeping it under 4K in weight. We'll be mostly the hills of Virginia, NC and WV. Not the Rockies, will definitely need more power for that. Any other things to consider? Like upgraded springs, struts, sway bars or brakes?
     
  4. Jul 30, 2023 at 6:59 AM
    #4
    Mr.bee

    Mr.bee King Turdra

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    Consider the aero resistance. The v6 will struggle to push the wind a TT carries. I think a pop-up would be the ticket.
     
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  5. Jul 30, 2023 at 7:03 AM
    #5
    Elevatorguy

    Elevatorguy Yotas and JD Green!

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    Are you running stock size tires? If not, I would be changing the gearing first.
     
  6. Jul 30, 2023 at 8:20 AM
    #6
    Tbrandt

    Tbrandt I read it on an internet forum, it must be true.

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    I did lots of towing with Toyota V6 manuals before my Tundra. 1993 T100 3.0L V6, 2001 Tacoma 3.4L V6, and 2018 Tacoma 3.5L V6.

    Under 5000lb is a smart bet, especially if you’re going to be pulling a big box in the form of a travel trailer. Wind resistance is going to make the engine work very hard above 60-65.

    The manual transmission and small engine are going to make you work hard. Lots of shifting to stay in the power. You will never have to worry about getting sleepy towing with a manual transmission because you are always changing gears through the hills.

    I put about 10k miles of towing a U-Haul 6x12 on my 2018 Tacoma. Loved every minute of it, you are the tow/haul mode. My wife was less thrilled, however. She couldn’t hold my hand or lean against me to take a nap any time we had a trailer back there.

    The truck will absolutely do it, you just have to be prepared to pay much more attention. And stop for gas A LOT.
     
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  7. Jul 30, 2023 at 11:47 AM
    #7
    Bmktw2

    Bmktw2 Yard Dog

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    Should do good as long as you keep the speed low and the camper as small as possible.
    I've been looking at some campers myself in the 17' long range
     
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  8. Jul 30, 2023 at 11:50 AM
    #8
    Aerindel

    Aerindel New Member

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    My trailer is about 2500....I can't go faster than 70 in third gear. Uphill is about 50 mph....in 2nd.

    7.5 MPG.......

    And that is the 4.7 V8.....

    I would not tow with your rig unless its a tear drop.
     
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  9. Jul 31, 2023 at 1:06 AM
    #9
    RustyBirf

    RustyBirf New Member

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    Good advice.

    Yes, you can pull a TT but it will be a struggle. Even with a popup you'll likely be seeing 2nd gear on mountain inclines. But with a TT it will hurt a lot more and you might visit 1st gear. Stick with a pop up and you'll feel a trailer back there, but switch to a TT and you'll feel a whale. It will suck all the fun out of your drives, and that's an important part of your camping trip. You're putting a lot of stress and pain on yourself. You're also putting a lot of stress and pain on your truck.

    Been there done that. Pulled a travel trailer with a 3.4 3rd gen 4runner myself and finally had it and bought a Tundra 4.7. My TT was 3500-4000 with a weight distribution hitch, and it still sucked everywhere not flatlands.
     
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  10. Jul 31, 2023 at 1:38 AM
    #10
    GODZILLA

    GODZILLA Introverted Troglodyte

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    Use the drop down to select your specific truck here https://www.edmunds.com/toyota/tundra/2004/st-100344139/features-specs/ and it will give you the basic brochure specs of your truck. Keep in mind, it's giving you the magical advertising numbers that few if any production trucks actually achieve. The real number is likely a bit lower with yours being 4WD and not a regular cab. You also have to deduct from payload passengers, gear, mods and options in the truck.

    That said, here's a screenshot for a 2004 Access Cab SR5 short bed 4x4. Notice the max tow is 4800 pounds. Even if your truck is the unicorn that actually has the advertised ratings, for comfortable towing you will likely want to stay well below the limit. Towing at max capacity is seldom fun, never fast, and always taxing on the vehicle. I'd personally point you toward a teardrop or an adventure trailer with a RTT on it.



    upload_2023-7-31_2-32-37.png
     
  11. Aug 1, 2023 at 3:13 PM
    #11
    ericryder

    ericryder Nailbender

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    I looked up the specs on my truck ('04 Tundra 4WD, Access Cab, 3.4 V6, 5 speed SR5), and NH appears to require trailer brakes when towing trailers over 1500#.

    Here's the link: https://www.rvtravel.com/trailer-br...aws are similar,the requirement at 2,000 lbs.

    FWIW, I regularly tow an 18' Ranger bass boat w/ a package weight of about #3000. (hull wt #1080 iirc, motor #400, troll motor, fuel + batteries around #500, gear 300#, trailer - maybe #600). The truck will pull it reasonably/barely well here in the NH hills. I'm usually running a gear lower than I would empty on the same terrain. I would not like to haul it in the mountains, or with another #1000. For the record however: I have two saddle boxes on the bedrail, and the back seat removed - with those areas stuffed with construction tools (probably #500, plus my #240 tail).

    P.S. I almost learned the hard way last Saturday why I might want to install brakes on the trailer and a controller in the truck. I'm pulling at 55 MPH, with a pickup well out in front of me in the rain. He comes to a full stop for several wild turkeys. I put my foot through the floorboards, and was pretty sure I was going to cover the 100'-150' buffer and smack him. Turns out, I blew a rear brake line right then and there, and I suspect the antilocks thought they were doing me a favor. He got moving just in time (I think he saw me comin'!). FWIW, the proportioning valve did it's job, I got home without knowing I blew that line. I checked the fluid when I parked it - maybe 1/4 low: about what you'd expect with well-worn pads and shoes? Got up in the morning and the reservoir was empty, and I had a big ol' s^*tstain on the driveway. Spent Sunday AM replacing corroded lines.
     
  12. Aug 1, 2023 at 11:30 PM
    #12
    NickB_01TRD

    NickB_01TRD You don't need less cars, just more driveway.

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    @w666 your truck had total brake failure when your line blew out. This seems like a rear brake failure vs front. Wonder if that's the difference.
     
  13. Aug 2, 2023 at 2:02 AM
    #13
    w666

    w666 D. None of the above

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    Good observation, but I still haven't solved the mystery. I blew out the left front corner, and subsequently lost all the fluid. I still suspect my MC is also bad, allowing fluid to pass from the front half to the rear. Or maybe the LSPV?
     
  14. Aug 2, 2023 at 5:49 AM
    #14
    shifty`

    shifty` Oddfellows local 151 behind the firehouse

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    I'd suspect the MC before the LSPV, all day err day.
     
  15. Aug 2, 2023 at 6:17 AM
    #15
    ericryder

    ericryder Nailbender

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    Yes. I blew one of the lines going to/from the load sensing proportioner for the rears.
     
  16. Aug 17, 2023 at 6:12 PM
    #16
    Bmktw2

    Bmktw2 Yard Dog

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    What do you all think?
    Will the V6 Tuntra do okay pulling this 18ft camper trailer? I want to buy it with my first paycheck

    Screenshot_20230817-210926~2.png
     
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  17. Aug 17, 2023 at 6:26 PM
    #17
    JasonC.

    JasonC. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

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    What happened to the boat?
     
  18. Aug 18, 2023 at 6:44 AM
    #18
    Bmktw2

    Bmktw2 Yard Dog

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    Are you asking me? You may have me mixed up with another poster because I don't have a boat
     
  19. Aug 18, 2023 at 8:09 AM
    #19
    tvpierce

    tvpierce Formerly New Member

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    How much does it weigh? I have a similarly sized camper (19' hybrid) that's 4200 lbs dry/6000 gross.

    Google says the towing capacity for our trucks is 4950 - 7200 lbs. Yours being a V6/manual trans/4WD will be the lowest -- so 4950. (I think the highest rating is for a regular cab/V8/auto/2WD)

    I have a V8/4WD/auto/Access Cab and it does it, but it struggles at highway speeds. I would think yours with the 3.4 liter V6 would struggle even more.
     
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  20. Aug 18, 2023 at 8:27 AM
    #20
    SD Surfer

    SD Surfer Globe Trotting Bon Vivant

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    Hard to say without specs on the trailer, and I don't wanna' be the one who rains on your parade... but that's a lot.

    Pulling something with that much frontal surface area is big time wind resistance. Both you and truck would be working your tails off.

    A quick Google search looks like that might be a Cruiser RV "Fun Finder 189xxx"?

    Sleeps 5 Slides 1
    Ext Width 7 ft Ext Height 8 ft 9 in
    Int Height 6 ft 4 in Hitch Weight 255 lbs
    GVWR 5855 lbs Dry Weight 3368 lbs
    Cargo Capacity 2487 lbs Fresh Water Capacity 25 gals
    Grey Water Capacity 25 gals Black Water Capacity 25 gals
    Furnace BTU 16000 btu
     
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  21. Aug 18, 2023 at 8:27 AM
    #21
    KNABORES

    KNABORES Sarcasm incoming

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    I’d pull that with the V6 manual. Just maybe not through the Rockies.
     
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  22. Aug 18, 2023 at 8:53 AM
    #22
    Hbjeff

    Hbjeff New Member

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    Why not flat pull the tundra behind the class c?
     
  23. Aug 20, 2023 at 5:39 PM
    #23
    ShredBox

    ShredBox [OP] New Member

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    Can I flat pull the Tundra? I looked it up somewhere that said it's a bad idea. Or do I need a dolly and disconnect the driveshaft? Or is putting the transfer case in neutral good enough? Does having a manual make a difference?
     
  24. Aug 20, 2023 at 9:55 PM
    #24
    digitalferg

    digitalferg New Member

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    You can 100% flat tow the manual equipped 1GT. Trans in neutral, tcase in neutral, rock and roll.

    As for towing a TT with a 3.4... egads. I've had two Supercharged 3.4L Tacomas and even with the added SC power I wouldn't want to try pulling anything with those. Pulling loaded up uhaul 6x12 trailers was bad enough.

    I'm now pulling a dual axle 5500 GVWR 21ft TT with my 06 1GT DCab and it's barely cutting it for me. Actually pulls awesome on the flats, but Utah Mtn passes... barely tolerable.

    Then you got to think about stopping it all. Trailer brakes and controller are mandatory, IMO. (For anything over the payload rating which is like 1200-1500 lbs). The stock 1GT brakes are such shit (the big ones and the small ones). I'm now on full GX460 front brakes now and SOS rear disc conversion and it is a whole new world. Stops like it actually should.
     
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  25. Aug 21, 2023 at 12:39 AM
    #25
    GODZILLA

    GODZILLA Introverted Troglodyte

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    Need a bigger truck or a smaller trailer, IMO. I wouldn't try to pull much more than 3-4K lbs with a V6. Not unless it's a once a year thing for something like 50 miles. Even then I'd want more truck for it, and I'd probably rent a bigger pickup to do it.
     
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  26. Aug 21, 2023 at 1:42 AM
    #26
    Mr.bee

    Mr.bee King Turdra

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    how do you get the t-case into neutral? Or do the manual trucks have a manual t-case?
     
  27. Aug 21, 2023 at 4:20 AM
    #27
    shoe07

    shoe07 New Member

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    It appears they have a manual transfer case with a neutral position.

    IMG_1462.png
     
  28. Aug 21, 2023 at 5:51 AM
    #28
    EmergencyMaximum

    EmergencyMaximum New Member

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    Man, those floor levers turn me on, gang!
     
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  29. Aug 21, 2023 at 9:02 AM
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    tvpierce

    tvpierce Formerly New Member

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    Me too! :rofl:
     
  30. Aug 23, 2023 at 2:54 AM
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    Bmktw2

    Bmktw2 Yard Dog

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