Ford Falcon for towing
Submitted: Saturday, Jan 02, 2010 at 17:47
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Member - barry F (NSW)
Howdy Folks & happy New Year.
I need your valued comments & opinions please. We have a pop top van that when in travel mode would weigh in the vicinity of 1800-1900 Kg. We currently tow it with an 07 Mazda BT50 twin cab 4x2 manual, bought new & now has 40000 K on the clock. This vehicle has an ongoing clutch problem & will be out of warranty June 2010, so I am going to unload it sometime this year.
SWMBI drives a Camry for whatever it is that women do when they go out spending the "hard earned!!" Anyway, we are now of an age when we no longer realy need two vehicles.
So...... I'm thinking maybe a Falcon
sedan ( towing capacity 2300 Kg) as maybe a vehicle that would suit our daily & also our towing needs.
Any comments & opinions would be appreciated, Thanks.
Reply By: Member - Dalb (SA) - Saturday, Jan 02, 2010 at 20:01
Saturday, Jan 02, 2010 at 20:01
Barry
I have had 5 company Falcons and found them to be fantastic towing vehicles when fitted with the factory fitted 2.2 tonne towing rig, which includes gearbox cooling.
I towed a 25ft 2.5t trailer sailer yacht and admit the rig was a little too large and too heavy, but more recently towed a 2t tandem offroad caravan and felt there was more than ample power, good control when the load levelling rig was fully wound up, and reasonable economy. On a trip
Adelaide to
Kakadu was achieving 17.9l/100km at 110 km/hr. I had a trip computer and strangely enough i got the sane economy at 100 and also at 80kph - so the motor was really just cruising.
cheers DalbImage Could Not Be Found
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Reply By: Road Warrior - Sunday, Jan 03, 2010 at 00:42
Sunday, Jan 03, 2010 at 00:42
Firstly, any BA Falcon owner should have a trans cooler fitted regardless of whether you are towing or not. There is a design flaw in the factory trans cooling pipe in the radiator which needs to be bypassed and what better way to do this than with a trans cooler that will also help prolong the auto's life.
Secondly, if it were me, I would buy a wagon for this purpose because you will get the old-skool heavy duty leaf spring
suspension with the wagon (the sedans are IRS and squat in the bum when loaded up) which can give you up to 575kg of load capacity in the wagon load space alone. Better for towing too.
And yes, the factory e-gas system is crap, way down on power compared to the standard version (182kw compared to 156 on e-gas) which will make towing something heavy an absolute pain in the arse. It is also not a dual fuel system so if you're out in the regional areas and no one sells LPG, you're screwed. If you want gas, get a decent aftermarket system fitted. At least then you'll have dual fuel.
Oh, and I would probably lean towards getting a BF over a BA. The BA had too many design flaws - most of which were sorted with the BF.
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Follow Up By: Steve Ellis - Monday, Jan 04, 2010 at 09:13
Monday, Jan 04, 2010 at 09:13
I agree about the wagon but I believe they are no longer available new?
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Reply By: jtw2005 - Wednesday, Jan 06, 2010 at 22:47
Wednesday, Jan 06, 2010 at 22:47
Hi Barry, We use a 2005 BA Mk II wagon to tow an 18' tandem poptop. We've been using this vehicle for 3 years now and have never had any issues. This has included 6000k to
Rockhampton and back a couple of years ago. We do have the 2300kg tow pack (was on the vehicle when we purchased it) but have added a separate transmission cooler, completely eliminating the issues with the standard cooler running through the radiator core (it's possible that if the core fails the transmission can end up full of water, very expensive repair). This was NOT included with the tow pack but cost only about $250 from memory. Have also added LPG and a Redarc isolator to charge the van battery whilst travelling. Fuel economy for the
Rockhampton trip averaged 18.5l/100k, mostly cruising at 95-100k for the whole. I do tow on LPG and even though it's not the new injection system there's still plenty of power. I do tend to use petrol in town and in hilly terrain. Having the LPG gives me extra range and cheap running around town. As has been mentioned the wagon is the best bet due to the leaf springs but I did go for the Futura - just that bit nicer. Ours was ex govt 18 months old and cost less than $20k, with only 30,000k on the clock. It's now over 100,000k and I've only needed to do tyres and a battery, just normal stuff. It does sit a little low in the back and I'm thinking of adding aurbags - approx $500.
In all it's been great and we are even considering going up the centre next year, including the Oodnadatte track.
Hope this helps you out.
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