4x4 problems with pulling 5vr??
My only complaint is it cost me twice the normal cost to switch from 3.73's to the 4.30's. So buy want you want factory installed and save a ton o' money.
I have had no other issues maintenance wise or mechanically. It just removes 400 pounds of towing cap, but it's worth it to have those super gears in a bind!
I bought the 2006 F-350 King Ranch Dually PSD Auto 4x4 with tow boss package (4:30 rears) on July 4.
After 500 miles of running around town, hooked on to the old '89 HitchHiker (10,000 lbs) and hauled it about 150 miles up I-64 from Norfolk to Richmond - gently rolling hills most of the way. Towed like a dream.
Traded the '89 for a 2007 NuWa HitchHiker Champagne 37CKRD weighing 15,620 empty and towed it back down I-64 to Norfolk. Ran around town for another week and had about 900 miles on the truck.
Then the fun began. Hooked onto the new trailer and took it up I-64, I-95, across I-68, n on I-79, across I-70 to Columbus, Oh. Like the tech pages say, hook on to a load, find a hill and get it warm. I did. I-68 has some hills and the truck pulled like a dream.
NuWa paid me to take the trailer from Norfolk to Goshen, Indiana to have an air-ride suspension installed. We decided to put the Trail-Air pin box on at the same time.
Dropped down to central Illinois for a few days to show the rig off to family.
Came back across I-64 from Louisville, KY. There are some 5 mile 7% grades along there in WV. Dropped down to 35 mph on one of those, but for the most part, I was able to maintain 45+ on the hills and cruised around 60 mph. I think my mileage is going to work out to around 8.5 mpg overall.
The only bad experience with the truck was when I was playing with cruise control and tow/haul. If the manual says anything about the cruise dropping out if you drop 10 mph, I forgot it. And when it happened, I thought "OH, CRAP! I just killed my new truck!" Looked down and it was sitting there at idle with no bad messages on the dash, coasting up that hill and rapidly slowing down. Mashed the accelerator and got that "Feels Good" feeling again.
Did I mention that I put a cup of coffee in the kitchen sink and didn't turn it over for the entire trip? The wife had counted the number of cans and bottle I turned over in the rear pantry cabinets on the trip and the number was significantly lower on the return trip with the air ride.
It took them about 5 hours to do the installation on a triple axle fiver. The entire package is a bolt on. If you've got a double axle, any dealer should be able to get the parts and install it for you. The triple requires some extra alignement considerations.
To bring this back to the original subject, this system actually raised my trailer a little bit, so I am towing a bit more level with the 4x4.
PM me at glsurratt@verizon.net if you'd like more info.
Modern 5th wheels are built different than the old ones. I had an older trailer that I wouldn't have been able to tow with my current truck, it was too low. The newer trailers are higher in front and will work just fine with a 4x4 truck.
Ford Trucks for Ford Truck Enthusiasts
one questions....
has anyone heard that I should not pull a 5th wheel with a 4x4.... have heard numerous comments from some older folks...they hear of problems with pulling with 4x4's, but of course car salesmen and 5vr salesmen say no problem...
just heard one can get into a bind using 4x4 due to it being 3 inches higher
does anyone know of any situation that you could get into with a 4x4 and not with a 2 wheel drive
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