bajaretreat
Junior Nomad
Posts: 37
Registered: 11-6-2007
Location: Chippewa Falls, WI/La Paz eventually
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Mood: Baja Fever
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24 ft motorhome towing a car
Looking for advice. We have a 24 ft motorhome, 5.7 Chevy engine, 1992 model, in great mechanical shape. Hubby feels that towing our car (ford
contour), would be too much for the engine. Our mechanic seems to think it will be okay but he is unfamiliar with driving in Baja (or is it La
Baja?)....
Anyone have any similar experience or knowlege to share?
Never be afraid to do what\'s right especially if the well being of a person or animal is at stake. Society\'s punishments are small
compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way.
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Pescador
Ultra Nomad
Posts: 3587
Registered: 10-17-2002
Location: Baja California Sur
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Except for the Santa Rosalia Grade and the Loreto grade, there are not many steep and long areas in the Baja. You should have no problem but just
remember to keep the transmission downshifted and in a lower gear going up any hills. I worry more about the transmission overheating than I ever do
about that particular engine.
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wakemall
Nomad
Posts: 183
Registered: 7-17-2006
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Pescador is absolutely correct. Manually control the trans on grades. Do not lug the trans.
Although I would install an aftermarket trans cooler. Cheap safety.
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Bob and Susan
Elite Nomad
Posts: 8813
Registered: 8-20-2003
Location: Mulege BCS on the BAY
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Mood: Full Time Residents
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i dont think that trans can handle a fully loaded rv plus a car or truck
you'll burn it up...
hard to repair here
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BajaWarrior
Super Nomad
Posts: 2307
Registered: 9-27-2006
Location: Mission Bay, San Diego. Playa Hermosa, San Felipe.
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Mood: Anxious to get south
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How are you towing it? On a Dolly or flatbed trailer? A Ford Contour is probably an Automatic transmission and would need a lube pump to tow it on the
ground.
Am I correct on this guys?
Also, the grade not mentioned going downhill heading south is the one coming into El Rosario. I smoked my brakes and had both feet on the brake pedal
towing only a VW Buggy behind a Dodge Crew Cab with a 12' cabover camper. Lotsa weight heading south...
Haven't had a bad trip yet....
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bajaretreat
Junior Nomad
Posts: 37
Registered: 11-6-2007
Location: Chippewa Falls, WI/La Paz eventually
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Mood: Baja Fever
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We'd be towing with a dolly, and the car is an automatic front wheel drive. There is a tranny gauge on the dash to monitor the temp. as well.
I don't think we will be towing...hubby feels the same as the above reply that we'd burn up the transmission and not worth the risk. Thanks all for
the replies....
Never be afraid to do what\'s right especially if the well being of a person or animal is at stake. Society\'s punishments are small
compared to the wounds we inflict on our soul when we look the other way.
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Hook
Elite Nomad
Posts: 9010
Registered: 3-13-2004
Location: Sonora
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Mood: Inquisitive
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IF you're concerned about the transmission, change out the fluid and replace it with synthetic tranny fluid, like a Mobil One.
Trannies burn up because they reach temps that breakdown conventional tranny fluid and then the moving parts have no lubrication. A synthetic wont
break down at temps you are likely to create (+- 225F). Tranny parts can take temps this high..........but not without adequate lubrication.
Make sure your brakes are in top condition and learn how to manually shift your tranny on DOWNHILL grades. Most MHs dont have a low enough first gear
to tackle the SR grade w/o having to use the brakes liberally.
Oh, and try and plan on going UP the bad grades before 10am, if possible.
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