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Old 07-24-2002, 01:21 PM   #1
68 Suburban
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What is the differece between GVW and towing weight?

I know all of are trucks have a Gross Vehicle Weight, but how do we know what the maximum we can tow. I would not think this would be the gross vehicle weight? I thumbed through the 68 Data Book and did not see anything about what weight can be safely towed with our trucks. Does anyone have an idea?
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Old 07-24-2002, 02:40 PM   #2
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The way I understand it is that GVW is the maximum amount to tow or haul. So figure that your truck is about 3600 for a 1/2 ton, about 4400 for a 3/4 ton, subtract that from the GVW and that's your towing capacity. I think if you have a trailer with brakes, it increases it since your truck's brakes aren't working so hard. Like my granddad said, the truck will pull anything, it's getting it to stop that's the problem.

If I'm incorrect, I'm sure someone will correct me.

Scott
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Old 07-24-2002, 02:58 PM   #3
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Im not sure that is correct. I think the GVW has to do with the actual weight that is on the truck, thus the capacity of the springs, brakes, etc. If what you say was correct, a C-10 truck could only tow 800-1000 lbs? I see Geo's pulling a U-haul weighing more than that
If you look at some of the newer SUV's like a trailer blazer, I think it can tow 6500lbs, but surely that trucks GVW is not that much.

I heard that the towing weight should not exceed the weight of your vehicle? So if you have a truck that weighs 4000lbs, you should not tow more than 4000lbs. Obviously you would want brakes on anything that weighs that much.
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Old 07-24-2002, 03:56 PM   #4
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Towing weight is separate. GVWR is the TOTAL amount of weight on the vehicles tires INCLUDING passengers, the truck itself and any load including trailer tongue weight. Tow weight has more to do with how your truck is equipped for cooling and braking. Figure about 10k for a 3/4 ton and 6k for a 1/2 ton is reasonable if you stay in the 55 range and have trailer brakes (and it's not trying to climb the Rocky Mountains!)I have towed about 9-9.5k# with my 3/4 ton truck and regularly tow 3500# with my Jimmy. (Front end loader on tandem axle flat bed with brakes on both axles)
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Old 07-24-2002, 06:54 PM   #5
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My '69 owners manual says GVW C10=3600-5600; C20=5500-8100; C30=6700-10000. 6 and 8 cyl. engines cause a different GVW probably cause of cooling and torque. 6 cyl. rated at about 1000# less in each instance. It seems a C10 can carry 1 ton in the bed. I know I've done it. My C10 factory weight was 3600#. Tires and springs matter a lot. This is where the heavy duty springs come in but does it matter if you use air shocks?
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Old 07-24-2002, 07:14 PM   #6
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Correction. I was looking at Subs and Panels. My truck is 5000 GVW.
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