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#11
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When I had my Hitch installed on my Honda Accord, it was welded on,
not bolted. Never had a problem. |
#12
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Ditto, I am on my second Odyssey (03 & 06). Several thousand miles of
straight out x/c. Good and convenient tow vehicle. PeterK "Udo" wrote in message oups.com... My Honda Odyssey has a sub frame which holds a 3500 lb hitch. I understand may car is based on an Accord chassis. I have 120000 miles on it 75% of it with my trailer. On its own, at normal highway speed, I get 25-27m/g If you like your accord you will love the Odyssey, new or used Udo |
#13
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Ray,
Have you looked into Subaru Foresters and Outbacks? They tow good, and if you can resist the turbo options the gas mileage is fine. They are all wheel drive so if you landout in a field you'll have better traction than the front wheel drive cars. I've got 73000 trouble free miles on my Forester. Chris |
#14
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Chris,
Yes, I am considering the Forester. I know you and RQ tow with turbo versions, but I would look ONLY at the normally aspirated models because I don't want to pay for the premium octane fuel required for the turbo models. The tough adjustment will be that I've been "corrupted" by the additional power of a V6 and I don't know what it will be like to tow with a four cylinder, again. Also, both the Forester and the Outback are smaller than the Accord which will take some time to adjust to. The 07 Forester is rated to tow 2,400 lbs, but I don't know what the max tongue weight is. Probably 10% of the max trailer weight. So, I guess I'm looking for a good, used, Forester. One good thing: Time is on my side. My flying is done for the winter and I don't have to worry about towing it anywhere for a while. Ray On Oct 21, 10:44 pm, chris wrote: Ray, Have you looked into Subaru Foresters and Outbacks? They tow good, and if you can resist the turbo options the gas mileage is fine. They are all wheel drive so if you landout in a field you'll have better traction than the front wheel drive cars. I've got 73000 trouble free miles on my Forester. Chris |
#15
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On Oct 22, 5:22 am, rlovinggood wrote:
Chris, Yes, I am considering the Forester. I know you and RQ tow with turbo versions, but I would look ONLY at the normally aspirated models because I don't want to pay for the premium octane fuel required for the turbo models. The tough adjustment will be that I've been "corrupted" by the additional power of a V6 and I don't know what it will be like to tow with a four cylinder, again. Also, both the Forester and the Outback are smaller than the Accord which will take some time to adjust to. The 07 Forester is rated to tow 2,400 lbs, but I don't know what the max tongue weight is. Probably 10% of the max trailer weight. So, I guess I'm looking for a good, used, Forester. One good thing: Time is on my side. My flying is done for the winter and I don't have to worry about towing it anywhere for a while. Ray On Oct 21, 10:44 pm, chris wrote: Ray, Have you looked into Subaru Foresters and Outbacks? They tow good, and if you can resist the turbo options the gas mileage is fine. They are all wheel drive so if you landout in a field you'll have better traction than the front wheel drive cars. I've got 73000 trouble free miles on my Forester. Chris- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I think my 05 Outback is rated for 200 lbs tongue weight and 2,700 trailer weight. It has the factory hitch. It's in the shop right now for an unrelated matter so I can't check. It's the regular 2.5i version, non-turbo 168 hp. Drives 70-80 no problem through New Mexico with a Cobra trailer and a 570 lb glider and other gear in the trailer. This is mostly on I-40 and some highways. There are places it would probably go a little slower here though. Bob |
#16
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![]() Yes, I am considering the Forester. I know you and RQ tow with turbo versions, but I would look ONLY at the normally aspirated models because I don't want to pay for the premium octane fuel required for the turbo models. There is a fellow pilot at Truckee (elev. 5,900') who tows his Genesis 2 in a Cobra fiberglass top trailer using a normally aspirated Subaru Forrester. I'm not sure of the vehicle's year but its the generation before the current one, maybe a 2003. He has towed it from sea level and over the Sierra Nevadas without complaints or incident. So I wuold imagine that a Forrester will be more than enough tow vehicle at your elevation. He also likes the car's AWD capability as he lives in the Sierras where it snows heavily during the winters. As an aside, not all AWD systems are equal. Most systems favor FWD and do not engage the rear wheels unitl slippage is detected in the front wheels. Subarus have several versions of AWD depending upon the model but they have continuous AWD in common, always sending power to all four wheels. To see how Subaru AWD compares to the competion see http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XyLgYskj-oc and http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q7dVF...elated&search= |
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