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#1
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Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related
reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan |
#2
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On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan My son uses an Outback as a tow car and it works just fine. No issue with transmission if used properly. With 4 cylinders, ya gotta stay in the right gear, then it's fine. Good Lick UH |
#3
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On Oct 29, 7:00*pm, wrote:
On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan My son uses an Outback as a tow car and it works just fine. No issue with transmission if used properly. With 4 cylinders, ya gotta stay in the right gear, then it's fine. Good Lick That's good to hear. Is his Outback manual or Automatic? Thanks, Ryan |
#4
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On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan I have a 4 cylinder 2003 legacy and have towed my glider both locally and on longer trips such as from CT to Virginia (Newcastle) with no problems. It tows great, plenty of power for the job. I have a manual transmission. |
#5
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On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan Depends what you are towing ! |
#6
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On Oct 30, 2:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. I've got a '95 2.5l Legacy 250T (Touring, not turbo) with automatic transmission. It tows just fine, including a Grob Twin Astir from Auckland to Wellington (http://hoult.org/bruce/Subaru_with_TA.jpg) and a Blanik on a very heavy open trailer. SIngle seaters are of course easy. The engine is absolutely fine with towing, but it does seem to be important for the transmission temperature to either drive fast enough that the torque converter goes into lock-up mode most of the time (75 - 80 km/h with Twin Astir on the back), or else take the advice in the manual to put it into 3rd gear, not 4th. Early 90's Legacy RS sedans (2.0 turbo) have been possibly the most popular tow vehicles in our club with serious pilots. |
#7
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A 4 cylinder can tow just fine. I towed a Pegasus from Idaho to
Kansas with a Toyota Celica. Picked up a DG202 in Kansas and towed it back Idaho. The same Toyota (different driver) towed an empty trailer to Georga and picked up another DG202 and towed it back to Idaho. We did 65-70 MPH most of the way and with good trailers it was perfectly stable. Brian |
#8
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As Dave said, it depends on what you're towing.
For a start, whatever it is had better have trailer brakes. I had a Nimbus 3 in a Pfeiffer trailer, and towed it with 3 vehicles: 00 Subaru Outback 2.5L manual. 96 Chevy Tahoe V8 auto. (purchased before the Nimbus trailer had brakes) 97 Holden Commodore V6 auto. Without a doubt, other than starting on a hill the Outback was the best tow vehicle. High winds weren't much of a factor. The Tahoe by comparison was awful in windy conditions, not that it handled well at any time compared to the Subaru. The Tahoe V8 with automatic was nice for stop and go traffic but big V8 engines and automatic transmissions are a waste otherwise. The Outback also towed LS-6, Libelle, AS-W20, AS-W27, AS-H26E. All in Cobra Trailers, all felt great. Outback fuel economy was 23MPG (US Gallon) towing at 65 to 70MPH with the AC on. Without a trailer, it's a fun car to drive. Expect 26MPG at 80MPH with AC on. Excellent in snow. Not bad in the dirt, but replace the factory "skid plate" with something real. However, the Outback has a weakness other than the infamous head gaskets. The viscous clutch in the transfer case gets too hot towing heavy trailers. The AS-H26E and Mojave Desert combination did it in. Had the Outback for 10 years. Was going to replace it with a 3.0L Outback (unfortunately only available with automatic) but found out the transfer case is the same. The replacement, an 08 RAV4 V6 automatic tows very well and isn't too thirsty, but I miss the Outback's handling and manual gearbox. Bottom line: If it's 15M span or new generation 18m pure glider in a good trailer, you'll love the Subaru. Jim On Oct 29, 7:52*pm, Dave Nadler wrote: On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Depends what you are towing ! |
#9
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In message
, ryanglover1969 writes Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan I live in the UK and have no problems towing a 15m glider in a metal trailer. Fuel consumption suffers a bit, but so long as the trailer is correctly loaded it is just fine. My car is a 4-cylinder manual diesel, not a truck or a 4WD. Thankfully the tow ball isn't that high on the car - if it was the back of the trailer would be rather close to the ground. -- Surfer! Email to: ramwater at uk2 dot net |
#10
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On Oct 29, 9:38*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Hello all. I am looking to buy a new vehicle, mainly for work related reasons. Something like an AWD Subaru Outback would be perfect for work. So I'm wondering what you all have to say about towing my sailplane trailer with a Subaru Outback, which is a 4 cylinder vehicle. That's the issue I need answered. Would a 4 cylinder do the job? Or would it tear up the transmission. I don't want a lager vehicle for MPG reasons. Thanks, Ryan Another plug for Subies: many thousands of miles towing with WRX hatchback (2.0L turbo / 5 speed manual). 150K on this car and it still goes like a rocket. -T8 |
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