AutosTalk Forums  

Transmission / towing question.

4x4 Cars Discussions about 4x4 cars. The on and off-road four wheel drive vehicle. (rec.autos.4x4)


Discuss Transmission / towing question. in the 4x4 Cars forum.



Reply
 
Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1  
Old   
john_williams1000@hotmail.com
 
Posts: n/a

Default Transmission / towing question. - 09-14-2005 , 11:46 AM






I am looking at 6 CYLINDER older model Frontiers and Tacomas (1995
through 2000). I am having troulbe understanding the "towing
capacities". I know there may be a difference between an automatic and
manual tranny in terms of towing. (ie a 2002 Frontier V6 has a towing
capacity of 3500 for manual and 5000 for auto.

What is the towing capacity of auto vs. manual Frontiers during those
years?

What is the towing capacity of auto vs. manual Tocamas during those
years?

Thanks!


Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old   
Bowgus
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Transmission / towing question. - 09-14-2005 , 05:58 PM






99/00 here ... http://www.trailerlife.com/towratings/tr_index.cfm


Quote:
I am looking at 6 CYLINDER older model Frontiers and Tacomas (1995
through 2000). I am having troulbe understanding the "towing
capacities".



Reply With Quote
  #3  
Old   
SnoMan
 
Posts: n/a

Default Re: Transmission / towing question. - 09-14-2005 , 06:44 PM



"john_williams1000" wrote:
Quote:
I am looking at 6 CYLINDER older model Frontiers and Tacomas (1995
through 2000). I am having troulbe understanding the "towing
capacities". I know there may be a difference between an automatic
and
manual tranny in terms of towing. (ie a 2002 Frontier V6 has a
towing
capacity of 3500 for manual and 5000 for auto.

What is the towing capacity of auto vs. manual Frontiers during those
years?

What is the towing capacity of auto vs. manual Tocamas during those
years?

Thanks!
Automatic generally have higher towing capacities in light trucks and
SUVs because they lack a really low "granny" first gear to get the
load moving where as a automatics torque converter can provide up to
and over double the flywheel torque when moving a load from a
standstill. With a hard starting with a cltuch you can only slip the
clutch so much before you fry it and even if you slip it you cannot
multiply the torque output of the engine like a torque converter can.

--
Posted using the http://www.autoforumz.com interface, at author's request
Articles individually checked for conformance to usenet standards
Topic URL: http://www.autoforumz.com/4X4-Transm...ict138262.html
Visit Topic URL to contact author (reg. req'd). Report abuse: http://www.autoforumz.com/eform.php?p=670101


Reply With Quote
Reply




Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



Powered by vBulletin Version 3.5.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.