ge5706670925485474004
4
Chris Fincham30 Dec 2016
REVIEW

The top 10 tow vehicles for hauling big trailerboats

A big tow capacity means nothing if the vehicle can’t deliver. Here are our tried-and-tested top 10 tow vehicles

When a manufacturer says that their vehicle can tow heavy stuff, it doesn’t mean it’s actually any good at doing it. You can have a 3500kg towing capacity, but if you don’t have the power, stability or touring range it means nothing.

Being heavy itself is a good start; a weighty trailer won’t push a tow vehicle around as much when the tow vehicle can stand its ground. A lanky wheel-base and a short rear axle-to-tow ball measurement also help to make a tow vehicle more planted.

Large torque figures look good on paper but do not always translate well to heavy hauling ability — it all becomes clear only when you’re actually doing miles with a heavy trailer hitched up.

All vehicles will suck down more fuel when lugging a big, bluff trailer around but if they don’t have have a fuel tank big enough to keep the engine fed on some outback transport stages, there’s no point towing with them.

1. RAM 2500 Laramie Max capacity: 350kg/3500kg
The RAM’s can ‘only’ tow 3500kg with a 50mm towball tongue (it can tow up to 6989kg with a pintle hook) and it’ll haul every one of those kilograms like it’s not there. A hefty 3577kg kerb weight and the roughly one-kilometre long wheelbase (that makes U-turns a tiresome back-and-fill effort) make RAM a rock-solid towing platform. When hill climbing the RAM barely needed half throttle to hold 100km/h with a 3000kg caravan behind and its exhaust brake pegs speed downhill like no other tow vehicle we’ve tested. Being big and heavy of course means city driving isn’t much fun and the RAM rides like a truck.
Price $139,500
Power/torque 276kW/1084Nm
Kerb weight 3577kg
Towing capacity 3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 7990kg
Fuel cons (towing) 20.5L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 520km

2. Toyota LandCruiser 200 Series GXL
The LandCruiser 200 has been the go-to heavy hauler for the last nine years it has been available. The ‘Cruiser’s key strength is its planted feel on the road with just about anything hitched up behind it. It’s pretty heavy, has a long wheelbase and its rear axle-to-coupling measurement is relatively short. Strong performance and lush ride when towing are other pluses. The nega-tives are that it is becoming dated (although it did receive a mild 2016 re-fresh) and the 4.5-litre V8 twin-turbo diesel engine is almost as thirsty as the petrol model when towing.
Price $88,460
Power/torque 195kW/650Nm
Kerb weight 2610kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6800kg
Fuel cons (towing) 19.2L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 669km

3. Land Rover Discovery 4 SE SDV6
The big Disco has a solid 2500kg-plus kerb weight to stop any caravan from pushing it around and the air-spring suspension not only levels out the ride with a trailer behind but gives a lush ride too. The sequential twin-turbo 2.7-litre diesel does not lack for power, either thumps out a sizable chunk of torque so it’s rare that the Disco will run out of puff up a hill. Only downsides is that if you want to run a WDH Land Rover doesn’t recommend it and you better get in quick - the D4 will be replaced by the 500kg lighter, possibly less towing-capable D5 (though still rated at 3500kg) in July 2017, and dealers are expected to run out of D4 stocks well before that.
Price $84,595
Power/torque 183kW/600Nm
Kerb weight 2558kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6740kg
Fuel cons (towing) 18.7L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 390km

4. Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo CRD
One of the few vehicles that has that rare combination of a 3500kg towing capacity and fairly compact city-friendly dimensions, the Grand Cherokee is very solid with a van behind — it’s very stable and predictable in its response to wind buffeting and road surface changes.
The 3.0-litre turbo-diesel V6 doesn’t have to work hard with a heavy trailer behind as it has a large wedge of mid-range torque to keep it steaming up the steepest of hills.
Price $59,000
Power/torque 184kW/570Nm
Kerb weight 2327kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6449kg
Fuel cons (towing) 17.2L/100km 93.5L tank
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 493km

5. Ford Ranger XLT Double Cab
The Ranger is an absolute cracker of a tow vehicle with a big tick alongside most of the criteria. The 2015 update blessed Ranger with a new low-inertia turbo among other changes that significantly reduces turbo lag and makes the Ranger nicer to tow with than the closely related Mazda BT-50. The Ranger’s inline five-cylinder produces the right number of Newton-metres at the right time — thanks in part to a six-speed auto with a good spread of ra-tios — to flatten most hills and engine braking is excellent. Its dual-cab wheelbase and fairly short rear-axle to tow hitch measurements give it gener-ally confidence-inspiring towing dynamics.
Price $55,415
Power/torque 147kW/470Nm
Kerb weight 2159kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6000kg
Fuel cons (towing) 18.6L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 380km

6. Mazda BT-50 XTR Dual Cab
The BT-50 has a really stable towing platform, barely moving at all when a trailer is hitched up and the in-line five-cylinder turbo-diesel performs well — While its firmer suspension quells movement better than the Ranger, the en-gine has more turbo lag off the line and doesn’t seem as smooth as the near-identical Ford inline five. The BT-50 easily pegs speed downhill with its strong engine braking.
Price $49,700
Power/torque 147kW/470Nm
Kerb weight 2105kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6000kg
Fuel cons (towing) 18.7L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 378km

7. Toyota LandCruiser GXL 76 Series
Even though it’s an old-timer, the LandCruiser wagon was made with the abil-ity to tow large, heavy loads. No fancy-pants gear in this truck: live axles, all-coil suspension and a separate chassis, plus a chest-thumping V8 turbo-diesel and short gearing.
The Cruiser’s rear suspension barely dips with a heavy trailer dropped onto the back, and is a stable towing rig. Its engine seems well capable of taking on the extra weight of a heavy van but once you get up to touring speed the turbo-diesel V8 does struggle on steeper hills.
Price $61,990
Power/torque 151kW/430Nm
Kerb weight 2265kg
Towing capacity 350kg/3500kg
Gross Combined Mass 6560kg
Fuel cons (towing) 15.9L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 767km

8. Volkswagen Amarok TDI400 Core
There is a strict definition a good tow vehicle : there’s no substitute for cubic inches. The Amarok seems to pick up this rule, have a good look at it and chuck it out the window. Its 2.0-litre four-cylinder twin turbo-diesel performs like something with a lot more cylinder displacement. The quiet, torque-laden free-revving engine isn’t so good at engine braking though, while the Amarok doesn’t move around at all with a heavy trailer and has the best ride quality of the utes here whether towing or not. The new V6 model looks even more promising as a tow hauler after a short drive towing a 2500kg trailer at the overseas launch.
Price $42,990
Power/torque 132kW/400Nm
Kerb weight 2020kg
Towing capacity 300kg/3000kg
Gross Combined Mass 5550kg
Fuel cons (towing) 13.2L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 556km

9. Isuzu MU-X LS-T
The MU-X punches above its weight as a heavy trailer hauler. Its specification sheet doesn’t make it look anything special but once you hitch up a heavy trailer you soon see it was born to tow. It just feels planted on the road, and  engine braking is very good. Performance up hills is better than the torque and power figures would suggest and the MU-X is pretty light on fuel when towing as well — a good thing, given its small-ish 65L tank. The front gets a bit of float happening on rough roads but the MU-X is the best of the ute-based SUVs out there.
Price $53,500
Power/torque 130kW/380Nm
Kerb weight 2060kg
Towing capacity 300kg/3000kg
Gross Combined Mass 5750kg
Fuel cons (towing) 12.9L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 454km

10. Holden Commodore SV6 Sportwagon
The Sportwagon’s towing capacity might be on the lighter side than the heavy-hitters here but it’s the only 2WD car that can tow as well up to 2100kg. The Holden is an excellent tow vehicle, with its wheels and tow coupling point all well spaced to keep it planted on the road and a plenty of power and torque to keep 100km/h within reach up steep hills. When you drop 200kg worth of coupling onto the Commodore’s towbar it does drop a lot but Holden’s 2100kg towing kit includes a Weight Distribution Hitch anyway. With the WDH fitted, the Holden is only occasionally unsettled by large trucks passing on the freeway. Get in quick; there’s only about 10 months to go be-fore the Sportwagon is no more.
Price $41,490
Power/torque 210kW/350Nm
Kerb weight 1776kg
Towing capacity 210kg/2100kg
Gross Combined Mass 4365kg
Fuel cons (towing) 15.5L/100km
Touring range (towing, with 50km safety margin) 408km

You can read more about

in our popular article.

Read the latest Boatsales Network news and reviews on your mobile, iPhone or PDA at the Boatsales Network's mobile site. Or download the App for smartphone and tablet.

Tags

Share this article
Written byChris Fincham
See all articles
Stay up to dateBecome a boatsales member and get the latest news, reviews and advice straight to your inbox.
Subscribe today
Disclaimer
Please see our Editorial Guidelines & Code of Ethics (including for more information about sponsored content and paid events). The information published on this website is of a general nature only and doesn’t consider your particular circumstances or needs.
Love every move.
Buy it. Sell it.Love it.
®
Download the boatsales app
    AppStoreDownloadGooglePlayDownload
    App Store and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc. Google Play and the Google Play logo are trademarks of Google LLC.
    © carsales.com.au Pty Ltd 1999-2025
    In the spirit of reconciliation we acknowledge the Traditional Custodians of Country throughout Australia and their connections to land, sea and community. We pay our respect to their Elders past and present and extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples today.