Travel Trailer Towing Experiences?

   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #12  
Ya, well :D Not so tough to know where to go antelope hunting. Deer gets trickier. Elk hunt spots are guarded by all I know who hunt :D

Most of my hunting has been deer and antelope. South Eastern part of state. I have hiked/camped other parts of the state though. Ten Sleep is pretty cool. Cloud Peak Wilderness is nice.

Just south of the park. Can't give too many details, it's public land! ;)
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences?
  • Thread Starter
#13  
Ya, well :D Not so tough to know where to go antelope hunting. Deer gets trickier. Elk hunt spots are guarded by all I know who hunt :D

Most of my hunting has been deer and antelope. South Eastern part of state. I have hiked/camped other parts of the state though. Ten Sleep is pretty cool. Cloud Peak Wilderness is nice.

That's what we are doing. It is an early season wilderness hunt. The bulls will still be bugling and it is a rush. I was lucky enough to have a decent 5x5 on the ground on 8:30 opening morning last year and would love to have a repeat again this year.

2008_elk1.jpg


An outfitter took a 375" bull out of the same area we hunted so we are afraid that it might be a little more crowded this year though.
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #14  
I would rent the trailer. If you break your buddies rig, well, even if you take care of fixing it it makes for uncomfortable situation. And his rig is at your trucks limit to boot.

Have you hunted Wyoming before? Are you ready to tow in bad weather? Muddy and/or snowy roads? 9 of 10 of my trips back there have been good weather. One went from good weather to a foot of snow in less than 12 hours.

Some folks showed up after it snowed towing a trailer. We were in a basic, primitive type campground. They had a lot of fun backing that trailer in to thier camp site. The 5 miles of dirt road coming in were slippery but passable.

I'd make sure to have chains for the trailer. It would be the pits to tow in snow with no chains on the trailer.

My trips have been mid October, for antelope and opening of deer season(Oct-15).
What good would that do?
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #16  
I vote for renting the 4K trailer.

Ask about separate insurance in case of a trailer breakdown such as a tire blowout, axle bearings, brakes, or spring replacement in case they weren't taken care of or were just ready to fail, or that nasty tree branch you didn't see that ripped a gaping hole in the siding.

The reason I say this is because it happened to me. I borrowed a trailer for a short trip to get a pickup truck I had bought. Towed it empty 170 miles to where the truck was. Loaded the truck on the trailer, chained it down and started for home. I got about 1 mile when I heard a loud squealing noise. I looked in the mirror and saw one trailer wheel leaning. I pulled into the nearest parking lot and determined that the wheel bearings had gone. Fortunately I had a jack and tools with me so I took it apart and with pieces in hand I unhooked the trailer and set off for a trailer or auto parts store. I was lucky it was a Saturday and found a trailer store within a few miles. He had the bearings, races, a tub of grease and the seal I needed. After a 2 hour delay for repairs I was hooked up and on my way again. It was then I vowed never to borrow a trailer again.
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #17  
Just 3 things I'd be concerned with; Brakes, Sway Control, and Load Distributing Hitch. Is it safe to assume you already have all of those? Of course, I've lived in RVs all over the USA and 4 provinces of Canada. My first conventional travel trailer was a 1972 Holiday Vacationer 24RB, although it actually measured 25' 3" in length. And in July, 1972, I pulled it to Alaska when we still had over a thousand miles of dirt and gravel roads each way. It was quite an adventure. I was pulling it with a 1971 3/4 ton standard cab Chevy, 2WD, 350 cu. in., automatic.
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #18  
I'll be pulling the trailer approximately 30 miles down a gravel road that is fairly well maintained.

Be sure to find out how much they may charge you for all the inevitable little dings in the front of the trailer. Especially bad if you have any hills to climb with a little wheel spin.
Sure glad they paved the road up the mountain to my hideaway in the NC mountains, did a number on the front of my trailers I took up there:cool:

BTW my wife is originally from Lubbock. She didn't recognize you in the pic but thought the elk looked familiar:p
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #19  
Because, when you hit the brakes on an icy or snowy road, the trailer is going to skid/slide, and probably push the tow vehicle along with it.

If you are chained up on the braking axles, you should maintain better traction and control.

What good would that do?
 
   / Travel Trailer Towing Experiences? #20  
Thanks for the replies so far.



I was thinking the 4,000lb trailer wouldn't be that hard to pull. I was thinking it would be worth the extra gas money to pull it there and back so I could load up everything before we left and then unload and clean it once we got back. I figured 6 mpg difference would cost $150 in gas and pulling the trailer would take 1 1/2 hours extra time each way. The rental is a little cheaper here than the rate in Wyoming and it looked like it would be almost the same cost either way. I'm planning on 12 mpg but that might be optimistic. Pulling my 7,000lb trailer with my tractor loaded to the gills I get about 10 mpg so I figured I would do a little better only pulling 4,000lbs but wasn't sure on the wind resistance. I was thinking I would plan on pulling at 65 mph and save a little gas and stress on the truck that way.




Nathan

For what its worth my co worker just got back from the big aviation gathering in Oshkosh Wisconsin. He has a 2005 Yukon Denali and a Light weight 26' travel trailer that is around 4,000# and he only got 8mpg. I think for you trucks age and the hills and wind resistance you will be lucky to average 7mpg. My neighbor has a 8,000# travel trailer that is 28' long and they pull it with a 2006 F-150 4x4 and only travel around Indiana. They also get 8mpg which just goes to prove my point that its not so much the wight as it is the wind resistance.

Weight is one thing like I said before when it comes to climbing grades, accelerating, and stopping. The bigger issue is wind resistance.

Chris
 

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