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Thread: Tdi's and towbar downward pressure rating

  1. #11
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    ....................What they said above.......


    Went through this all in length 5 yrs ago, including re-plating towbar (HAYMAN REESE)....and getting letter from them,

    But, it still comes down to the MANUFACTURER OF THE VEHICLE specs, in the handbook, which states 120kg, the letter from Landrover and HR states that, "bar is rated to 150kg OR whatever the vehicle manufacturer maximum is", Which D1 Handbook states as 120kg.(well ir did for those sold in 94-95 update spec)

    Inc, your caravan repairer mate is right, even if he likes to rub it in eh .............the caravan industry has clamped down a lot in recent years, but there are still some who break the rules and sell grossly heavy vans to people with under-capable vehicles..(NOT LR of course)

    My father wanted a particular van a couple of years back.....two dealers of same van ......when looking at prices comparison...1st said hey , no worries do'nt worry about the legality of insurance , 2ND, said, Sorry, have to choose another van.

    Shame, as we all know you could Safely tow 150kg or a little more.

    Cheers,

    Wayne.

  2. #12
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    I read a letter to the editor of a 4wd magazine a few years back - some overpaid retiree bought himself a fancy German Soft-roader and towed a large van far enough to almost rip the towbar out of the back. Hayman-reese replaced the bar and repaired the car for nothing, despite the downforce being about double what was plated, but the **** wanted the car replaced. The Editors told him what they thought of him!

    Still, I don't understand why the downforce is so (relatively) low on Land Rovers when the in-car load capacity is close to a ton. Can anyone explain why?
    Steve

    2003 Discovery 2a
    In better care:
    1992 Defender
    1963 Series IIa Ambulance
    1977 Series III Ex-Army
    1988 County V8
    1981 V8 Series 3 "Stage 1"
    REMLR No. 215

  3. #13
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    Surely it is the responsibility of the purchaser to make sure their tow vehicle is capable of pulling the van they choose. Putting the onus on the seller of the van sounds a lot like dodging resposibility to me. Heading down the path of the "it can't be my fault so I better sue someone else" mentality.

    BTW, I don't sell caravans but I am concerned about the "not my fault" society that seems to be breeding unchecked in Australia .

  4. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by scrambler View Post
    I read a letter to the editor of a 4wd magazine a few years back - some overpaid retiree bought himself a fancy German Soft-roader and towed a large van far enough to almost rip the towbar out of the back. Hayman-reese replaced the bar and repaired the car for nothing, despite the downforce being about double what was plated, but the **** wanted the car replaced. The Editors told him what they thought of him!
    I think in this case the owner of the car had also fitted an extended (vertically) draw bar because the van was an off road model. In regards to the D3, LR are strict on what towbar extensions are allowed (pretty much none!).

  5. #15
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    Smile

    ..................sorry folks, forgot to mention above,

    When i spoke to Landrover Australia directly and asked your question 'Big John', why such a low Downforce load?, they basically said that back then, during the time they were originally having the model complianced, LR had effectively under-estimated the Ball -load, as in the UK most vans etc are heaps lighter in that area, even if they have a similar Gross weight.

    They went on to say that they could not do anything about it Retrospectively, even though Mitsubishi Australia were at that time attempting do do just that with their Pajero's of similar age.

    Anyway, i reckon that you can still have a heap of choice within that limit as to what you can tow, and it is the responsibility of the "owner", to check everything is cosher and within those limits before they head out......at least you've got one known starting point that's not vague, and you're well and truly covered.

    Happy travels,

    Wayne.

  6. #16
    JamesH Guest
    Hi Guys thanks for the comments.

    As many of you had noted the issue is not what the vehicle can safely tow. It is about what it can legally tow. The van salespeople said in the case of a prang you were towing the caravan illegally (if it is over 150 ball weight) and you are up for all that entails.

    LR have basically admitted it was a giant paperwork stuff up back when the Tdis came out. Of course they can handle the weight.

    One guy says his little Mazda farm ute can legally tow his new van (it is only the smallest possible vans that are under 150kg, the vans in both cases are not big ones btw) but he would never dream of ripping the guts out of the thing by actually doing it.

    I was hoping you guys might have heard of getting some engineers certificate thingy and lodging it with the licencing dept or something like that as a work around but that is not what I'm hearing from you.

    Meanwhile two owners have their beloved Landies up for sale and have to do their round trip in a Prado or something equally evil.

  7. #17
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    Disco2 is 3500kg max and 250kg ball load.The 130 is the heavyweight in the towing stakes isnt it,or is it what Ive been lead to belive???
    Andrew
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  8. #18
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    There can be interesting loopholes. Mitsubishi Delicas can have towing capacities of about 2000kg depending on the installation and the confidence of the assessor, because there is no standard set by the manufacturer (since the model never came here.) BUT the almost-identical Starwagon has a 1000kg limit, because that's what Mitsubishi complianced it with.

    Back on REAL towing vehicles, I wonder what amount of modifications would be required to allow the tow rating to be re-assessed on a case-by-case basis? For example, would new springs and a custom towbar be enough?
    Steve

    2003 Discovery 2a
    In better care:
    1992 Defender
    1963 Series IIa Ambulance
    1977 Series III Ex-Army
    1988 County V8
    1981 V8 Series 3 "Stage 1"
    REMLR No. 215

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