I was thinking the TJ unlimited could tow up to 3,500lbs. I noticed today when looking in the service manual 3,500lbs is only listed with an Automatic transmission. Does this mean the 6sp is limited to 2,000lbs?
I have an 05 LJR. 6sp 4:10 rear. According to the OM GTR is 3,500# no mater the trans, cooling or axel. I pull an 1200# teardrop with 800# of gear in the TJ and have no issues going down the road. I do have to down shift on the taller grades. 70mph on the flats and down to 55mph on the long big grades. My saving grace is that I pull a teardrop and wind resistance is negligible. The longer LJ wheel base adds some extra stability.
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Thanks for the info, that makes me feel better. The orginal owner kept all the paper work and I found this in it which shows the 3,500. I don’t plan on towing 3,500 but I will be in the high 2,000. Out of curiosity I’ll be looking in the paper OM tomorrow. I have PDF’s of the OM and service manual and often just refer to them.
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Keep in mind the trailer weight allowance is also the gcwr minus the weight of your jeep totally loaded with gear and people.
It looks like in your case if the jeep exceeds 4300lbs it encroaches on the trailer capacity.
A train weighing 4 tons would make me worry about braking ability. Be careful!
Keep in mind the trailer weight allowance is also the gcwr minus the weight of your jeep totally loaded with gear and people.
It looks like in your case if the jeep exceeds 4300lbs it encroaches on the trailer capacity.
A train weighing 4 tons would make me worry about braking ability. Be careful!
I have an 05 LJR. 6sp 4:10 rear. According to the OM GTR is 3,500# no mater the trans, cooling or axel. I pull an 1200# teardrop with 800# of gear in the TJ and have no issues going down the road. I do have to down shift on the taller grades. 70mph on the flats and down to 55mph on the long big grades. My saving grace is that I pull a teardrop and wind resistance is negligible. The longer LJ wheel base adds some extra stability.
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Thank you for the thoughts.Another limiting factor listed by Jeep is the trailer frontal area of 25 sq. ft. for the TJ and 32 sq. ft. for the TJ Unlimited.
Pulling any trailer with a short wheelbase Jeep is not the best idea. User caveat.
Where did you find the 32 sq. ft. for the TJU (just curious)? The only thing I’ve ever seen is the 25 sq. ft.
That is for sure. We have a utility trailer we use for trips to Lowes / Home Depot, the feed store etc. and yes one little turn and the trailer changes directions very quickly. My wife is much better at than me.Yes, backing up a short-coupled single axle trailer can be very difficult.
In Post #1 of this thread.
Coincidentally, it is your post.![]()
I have one for the tow rig. I bought it for use when the heavy truck camper is in the bed and I have to use a 24" extension which tended to move the rear of the truck up and down a bit more that was comfy. On a whim, I used it without the camper and it made towing the Jeep on the trailer more pleasant than I expected so I use it all the time now.Do any of you wise people have opinions about a weight distribution hitch vs just getting an ant-sway setup? Current thought is an anti-sway as a few people I’ve talked to and what I’ve read to seem to recommend a WDH for trailers over 5,000lbs or so.
I agree and the reason I was only looking at the anti-sway. The reason I started to second guess is from the post above, see picture below. Is a load equalizing hitch different than a WDH?Any trailer towed behind a TJ or TJ Unlimited should be small enough and light enough that a weight distributing hitch or anti-sway hitch is unnecessary. If you think your trailer needs a weight distributing hitch you either have the wrong trailer or your TJ is the wrong tow rig.
This was my thought as well. Thank you for the advice.If it makes the same difference for a TJ, it is worth investigating. I'd do a few tows first and see if the tongue weight bothers you with how it affects the rear suspension. If it doesn't bother you much, no need to spend the money.
. . . Is a load equalizing hitch different than a WDH. . . ?
