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Ronnie September 18th, 2006 02:23 AM

Tow Vehicle
 
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com


Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now September 18th, 2006 04:15 AM

Tow Vehicle
 
On 17 Sep 2006 18:23:28 -0700, "Ronnie"
wrote:

I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com


Hi Ronnie,

I would look at the same truck in a 3/4 ton and put a pop up style
slide in camper in the bed. Some are pretty light, don't appreciably
increase drag over a topper style cap and in most cases you wouldn't
even need to raise it to catch a few zzz on the "Settee". When you
want to clean up or cook you can do it where ever you can park. Plenty
of storage too. Throw a porta potty in and you have everything you
need. Cross wind effect would be about the same as a van/suburban.

Craig Baugher September 18th, 2006 05:50 AM

Tow Vehicle
 
I have sold them all, Ford, Dodge, Chevrolet, GMC, Nissan, Toyota, and have
put them all through their paces on test track. GMC's Yukon with its power
on demand engine is incredible for fuel economy and it can also burn E85.
The Yukon also has a better residual/resale value than its Chevrolet
counterpart, the Tahoe/Suburban. Both can handle your boat with ease. I
still recommend an anti-sway system.

If you are not GMS, say that you are anyways. Why? Because GMS allows you
to see the actual invoice and they have to show it to you. Once you see the
invoice you can see the invoice price, GMS price, Supplier Price, Hold Back,
and Wholesale invoice price. Now if you really don't get GMS, you can
nogotiate a great price for the vehicle. Also, do not let them bounce you,
which once they find out you are not GMS they are going to try. "Oh, I'm
sorry, I just found out another salesman's customer put a deposit on this
vehicle, let's go find you another one." No Thank you, if I can't have
that one, I'll just pass. You will get that one. Then since you are
towing, get the extend service contract, but get it at a fair price, and
here is how. GMAC issues two books to a dealer. One is dealer cost and it
says dealer cost along the top of the book, and a second book that says MSRP
along the top. Let them know you know of both books and that you are
prepared to purchase an extend contract at $150 above Dealer Cost. Make
sure they show you the "Dealer Cost" book. If you are leasing, and you are
staying under 36000 miles, forget about it. But if you buying , and you are
putting less than $3000 down, you also want GAP Insurance too, and you
should not pay any more than $350 for it TOTAL. DO NOT BUY ANY ACCESSORIES
FROM THE DEALER!!! Now if you want accessories cheap, here is what you do.
Want Running boards, wind screens, etc., call the local accessory stores and
say, "Hi, I'm Joe Smith from Dealer X, and I want to know what our cost is
for whatever." They will tell you, then go there and say you want whatever.
When they tell you the price, say, "Oh No, Jack over at Dealer X says it was
only $X." They will give to you at dealer cost, saving you hundreds. If
the dealership offers you Paint, Fabric, Sealant protection, know the actual
cost is $64, so if they say it is anything higher, and you want it, and it
is a good option by the way, says, I'll give you $80 for it. They say no,
forget it. Its nice, but you can live without it. If you are someone that
takes Disability & Life Insurance, know the dealership gets 50% of the cost.
So if they charge $1000, it is only costing the dealership $500, so $600 is
a fair price. Same goes for the Life Insuance. Also watch the interest
rate, and before you sign a contract, demand to see the bank approval sheet,
which will have what is called a Buy Rate, and that is the interest rate you
should be paying. Anything more is the dealership bumping it for profit.
Finally, many dealerships add wheel locks, security etching, air bag lock
nuts, etc. DO NOT PAY FOR ANY OF THEM. You are not required too, and they
will charge you insane money for the product. They will tell you, "You have
to take them, they are already on the vehicle.' SO... TAKE THEM OFF! or
Give them to me for FREE!!!

ONE MORE THING. DO NOT BUY A VEHICLE FOR TOWING THAT DOES NOT HAVE A
FACTORY INSTALLED TOWING PACKAGE (which includes a High Volume Air Intake
and Air filter, Trans Cooler, Oil Cooler, Bigger Radiator, 100Amp Alt, and
bigger shocks). If you buy a hitch after the fact, you are only getting the
hitch, and you need all of it to properly tow you boat!!!)

Well, that you prepare you to get your best deal, regardless of what vehicle
you choose to buy.
--
Craig Baugher



Calif Bill September 18th, 2006 07:41 AM

Tow Vehicle
 

"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in message
...
On 17 Sep 2006 18:23:28 -0700, "Ronnie"
wrote:

I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com


Hi Ronnie,

I would look at the same truck in a 3/4 ton and put a pop up style
slide in camper in the bed. Some are pretty light, don't appreciably
increase drag over a topper style cap and in most cases you wouldn't
even need to raise it to catch a few zzz on the "Settee". When you
want to clean up or cook you can do it where ever you can park. Plenty
of storage too. Throw a porta potty in and you have everything you
need. Cross wind effect would be about the same as a van/suburban.


I agree whole hardily! I tow a 4400# boat and trailer that scales at about
4400# with a 2004 Chevy crewcab, shortbed Duramax diesel. I get about 14
mpg towing at 65-70 (speed limit in Calif for towing is 55) That is with my
Palomino B-800 slide in pop-up camper. Since this is a shortbed, the
sleeping on the settee would suck if you are over 5' tall. But the good
part is that it takes about 5 minutes to pop up the camper. Has queen size
bed, heater, stove and 3 way fridge. We do not cook in the camper as do not
want the food smells, so use a colman stove outside. Without towing and
with the camper, I get about 17 mpg at 55-60 mph. We just came back from a
drive to Alaska and for the 8200 miles averaged 15 mpg. Fourwheel popup
campers out of Woodland, CA have a slide in that is about 800#, where mine
is 1200#. I would go with gas if you do not drive a lot of miles a year, or
do not tow in mountains. I tow into the Sierra Nevada mt's and favorite
lake is at 4400' elevation, but do tow to Lake Tahoe and Reno, NV.



Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers September 18th, 2006 01:05 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com

Hi Ronnie,

When I got my new truck, I looked at the Suburbans and Tahoes. Color me
less than impressed..... They're glorified station wagons and even with the
four wheel drive packages, don't think that they really can go off-road.

If you like how your old truck handled things and the service it gave you,
why change?
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com



Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now September 18th, 2006 04:20 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 06:41:12 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote:


"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in message
.. .
On 17 Sep 2006 18:23:28 -0700, "Ronnie"
wrote:

I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com


Hi Ronnie,

I would look at the same truck in a 3/4 ton and put a pop up style
slide in camper in the bed. Some are pretty light, don't appreciably
increase drag over a topper style cap and in most cases you wouldn't
even need to raise it to catch a few zzz on the "Settee". When you
want to clean up or cook you can do it where ever you can park. Plenty
of storage too. Throw a porta potty in and you have everything you
need. Cross wind effect would be about the same as a van/suburban.


I agree whole hardily! I tow a 4400# boat and trailer that scales at about
4400# with a 2004 Chevy crewcab, shortbed Duramax diesel. I get about 14
mpg towing at 65-70 (speed limit in Calif for towing is 55) That is with my
Palomino B-800 slide in pop-up camper. Since this is a shortbed, the
sleeping on the settee would suck if you are over 5' tall. But the good
part is that it takes about 5 minutes to pop up the camper. Has queen size
bed, heater, stove and 3 way fridge. We do not cook in the camper as do not
want the food smells, so use a colman stove outside. Without towing and
with the camper, I get about 17 mpg at 55-60 mph. We just came back from a
drive to Alaska and for the 8200 miles averaged 15 mpg. Fourwheel popup
campers out of Woodland, CA have a slide in that is about 800#, where mine
is 1200#. I would go with gas if you do not drive a lot of miles a year, or
do not tow in mountains. I tow into the Sierra Nevada mt's and favorite
lake is at 4400' elevation, but do tow to Lake Tahoe and Reno, NV.


Bill & all,

Regarding the diesel. I have read that the new diesel fuels required
by the EPA will reduce mileage greatly. Not sure of the debut date. I
have heard estimates up to 25%. This will get better once the
Manufactures bring out engines designed for the new fuel but it will
take 5 years or so for mileage to increase to current levels or
better. Then there is another change in fuels scheduled and the
mileage will drop again.

Not sure if it will happen like this but it is something to consider
and research.

WARREN WOLK September 18th, 2006 04:26 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
Hi Ron!

Once you go Suburban you never go back buddy, that's all I have to say!

warren

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com




WARREN WOLK September 18th, 2006 04:29 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
Hey now! I'll take ya 4-wheelin in my Suburban anytime Stevo!

Don't knock it till ya try it!

Best damn tow-vehicle I've ever been in, barring gas mileage. I'll take
comfort over economy anytime for those 10+ hr drives....

Warren

"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in
message ...

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com

Hi Ronnie,

When I got my new truck, I looked at the Suburbans and Tahoes. Color me
less than impressed..... They're glorified station wagons and even with
the four wheel drive packages, don't think that they really can go
off-road.

If you like how your old truck handled things and the service it gave you,
why change?
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com




SimRacer September 18th, 2006 04:52 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com


Well, for room and the ability to sleep in it, some sort of fullsize SUV
would likely be the ticket, Suburban, Tahoe, etc.

I don't travel much with my rig beyond my "home" area of NC (SC/VA too) but
can say that the new generation of small V8s in most trucks is the best way
to go with gas mileage. I personally have a Tundra, 2000 model, 125k miles
on it, and she pulls strong still and beats the crap out of my neighbor's
1999 Z71 P/U when it comes to fuel mileage when pulling the same weight. (A
V8 Tundra's tow weight limit is 7200 lbs btw)

Maybe take a look at these new Tahoes that are out there with these 5.3L
(327cid) V8s? Regardless of the room you may need, you're gonna have to go
down in engine size to see any kind of fuel mileage gain IMO. I hear they're
offering a FlexFuel model of the Avalanche now too, if you live or travel
near a station that sells E85.



Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers September 18th, 2006 05:31 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in message
SNIP

Bill & all,

Regarding the diesel. I have read that the new diesel fuels required
by the EPA will reduce mileage greatly. Not sure of the debut date. I
have heard estimates up to 25%. This will get better once the
Manufactures bring out engines designed for the new fuel but it will
take 5 years or so for mileage to increase to current levels or
better. Then there is another change in fuels scheduled and the
mileage will drop again.

Not sure if it will happen like this but it is something to consider
and research.


Dan,

This is all scheduled to happen by the end of 2006 as mandated by the EPA
Clean Air Act of 2006. That's the main reason why I traded in my Duramax
diesel on basically the same truck, just with the 6.0 litre gas engine.

I figure, why pay a minimum of 10 cents a gallon more and get less
performance? Plus, while I loved the horsepower, performance and towing
capabilities of my diesel, I don't miss the diesel exhaust smell nor the
added hassle of finding diesel fuel at gas stations. There are an amazing
amount of small towns that don't have diesel fuel.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com



Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers September 18th, 2006 05:35 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

"WARREN WOLK" wrote in message
news:BXyPg.7367$832.1938@trnddc04...
Hey now! I'll take ya 4-wheelin in my Suburban anytime Stevo!

Don't knock it till ya try it!

Best damn tow-vehicle I've ever been in, barring gas mileage. I'll take
comfort over economy anytime for those 10+ hr drives....

Warren


Have you seen the 2007 Suburban? The Suburban used to be a rompin',
stompin' 4 wheel drive vehicle that you could load the wife and kids into
and go anywhere. Not anymore. I think my wife's Oldsmobile Achieva has the
same amount of ground clearance.

Unlike most 4 wheel drive owners, I actually use my 4 wheel drive and go
off-road more than a gravel driveway. I guarantee that if I owned a new
Suburban, the thing would be torn up inside of 6 months.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com



Calif Bill September 18th, 2006 05:36 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in message
...
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 06:41:12 GMT, "Calif Bill"
wrote:


"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in
message
. ..
On 17 Sep 2006 18:23:28 -0700, "Ronnie"
wrote:

I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com

Hi Ronnie,

I would look at the same truck in a 3/4 ton and put a pop up style
slide in camper in the bed. Some are pretty light, don't appreciably
increase drag over a topper style cap and in most cases you wouldn't
even need to raise it to catch a few zzz on the "Settee". When you
want to clean up or cook you can do it where ever you can park. Plenty
of storage too. Throw a porta potty in and you have everything you
need. Cross wind effect would be about the same as a van/suburban.


I agree whole hardily! I tow a 4400# boat and trailer that scales at
about
4400# with a 2004 Chevy crewcab, shortbed Duramax diesel. I get about 14
mpg towing at 65-70 (speed limit in Calif for towing is 55) That is with
my
Palomino B-800 slide in pop-up camper. Since this is a shortbed, the
sleeping on the settee would suck if you are over 5' tall. But the good
part is that it takes about 5 minutes to pop up the camper. Has queen
size
bed, heater, stove and 3 way fridge. We do not cook in the camper as do
not
want the food smells, so use a colman stove outside. Without towing and
with the camper, I get about 17 mpg at 55-60 mph. We just came back from
a
drive to Alaska and for the 8200 miles averaged 15 mpg. Fourwheel popup
campers out of Woodland, CA have a slide in that is about 800#, where mine
is 1200#. I would go with gas if you do not drive a lot of miles a year,
or
do not tow in mountains. I tow into the Sierra Nevada mt's and favorite
lake is at 4400' elevation, but do tow to Lake Tahoe and Reno, NV.


Bill & all,

Regarding the diesel. I have read that the new diesel fuels required
by the EPA will reduce mileage greatly. Not sure of the debut date. I
have heard estimates up to 25%. This will get better once the
Manufactures bring out engines designed for the new fuel but it will
take 5 years or so for mileage to increase to current levels or
better. Then there is another change in fuels scheduled and the
mileage will drop again.

Not sure if it will happen like this but it is something to consider
and research.


I have run some of the new fuels. California is always at the lead, good or
bad. I get about 5% less milage. Mine is the LLY engine. I understand the
newest Duramax diesels are getting 2-3 mpg moe than mine, both design and
the new 6 speed Allison tranny. And mine loses a mile or 2 because of the
crewcab. More weight. Coming back from Canada a month ago, running about
85-88 mph on I-5 I averaged about 13.9 mpg. Seems as if 82-83 is a point
where I start losing lots more milage than expected for wind resistance. I
think it is the chip programming from Chevy.



WARREN WOLK September 18th, 2006 06:56 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
Mines an 03, did some serious "muddin" in that puppy!

WW

"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in
message ...

"WARREN WOLK" wrote in message
news:BXyPg.7367$832.1938@trnddc04...
Hey now! I'll take ya 4-wheelin in my Suburban anytime Stevo!

Don't knock it till ya try it!

Best damn tow-vehicle I've ever been in, barring gas mileage. I'll take
comfort over economy anytime for those 10+ hr drives....

Warren


Have you seen the 2007 Suburban? The Suburban used to be a rompin',
stompin' 4 wheel drive vehicle that you could load the wife and kids into
and go anywhere. Not anymore. I think my wife's Oldsmobile Achieva has
the same amount of ground clearance.

Unlike most 4 wheel drive owners, I actually use my 4 wheel drive and go
off-road more than a gravel driveway. I guarantee that if I owned a new
Suburban, the thing would be torn up inside of 6 months.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com




Joe Haubenreich September 18th, 2006 07:58 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
I did. Sold my venerable 1992 Suburban a few years back and am now
completely satisfied with my 2002 Dodge Ram crew cab pickup. That means
nothing to Ronnie, of course... when it comes to vehicles, everyone has
their personal preferences.

Ronnie, take a look at the Lincoln pickups. I hear dealers are just about
giving those things away, and they have all the creature comforts you can
imagine. Basically they're a tricked-out Ford F-150.

Joe
"WARREN WOLK" wrote in message
news:mUyPg.7366$832.4070@trnddc04...
Hi Ron!

Once you go Suburban you never go back buddy, that's all I have to say!

warren

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com





Bill & Sue September 18th, 2006 08:12 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
Chevy Avalanche. I'm on my second and the 2007 comes with a flex fuel motor
that runs on reg gas or E85Ethanol. Pulls the boat great and is Very comfy.
With the seats folded down you can close the tailgate on a full size sheet
of plywood. I'm getting 17.5mpg around town and 20.2 on interstates
(haven't checked with the Cobra in tow). Doc
================================================== ==============================

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com




WARREN WOLK September 18th, 2006 08:29 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
How's the Cobra treating you Bill? Any good fish stories?

Warren

" Bill & Sue" wrote in message
...
Chevy Avalanche. I'm on my second and the 2007 comes with a flex fuel
motor that runs on reg gas or E85Ethanol. Pulls the boat great and is
Very comfy. With the seats folded down you can close the tailgate on a
full size sheet of plywood. I'm getting 17.5mpg around town and 20.2 on
interstates (haven't checked with the Cobra in tow). Doc
================================================== ==============================

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com






Bill & Sue September 18th, 2006 10:11 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
We/ve been so busy remodelling the house I haven't been for the last month!
Doc
================================================== ==================

"WARREN WOLK" wrote in message
news:OsCPg.903$GO2.450@trnddc01...
How's the Cobra treating you Bill? Any good fish stories?

Warren

" Bill & Sue" wrote in message
...
Chevy Avalanche. I'm on my second and the 2007 comes with a flex fuel
motor that runs on reg gas or E85Ethanol. Pulls the boat great and is
Very comfy. With the seats folded down you can close the tailgate on a
full size sheet of plywood. I'm getting 17.5mpg around town and 20.2 on
interstates (haven't checked with the Cobra in tow). Doc
================================================== ==============================

"Ronnie" wrote in message
ups.com...
I have been pulling my 20 foot Skeeter with a 2000 Z71 pickup. Love the
truck, handles the boat real good, gas milage not very good, got about
12 mpg on the road on my trip but I drive pretty fast, usually set the
cruise control 10 mph over the posted limit. It has 140,000 miles on it
now.

I had planned on replacing this truck with another one just like it,
keeping the old one to haul wood and do dirty work, keep the new one
for trips and pulling the boat. Sleeping in the cab of the truck and
trying to load it for a 2.5 week trip made me think about getting
something different, like a Surburban.

I pulled boats with full size vans for about 20 years and like the
truck better for backing, especially, but think I can handle most
anything. Not real worried about gas milage. Want something that will
handle the boat as well as my truck but give me more inside room.

I talked to Chris and Jim I think it was with a Surburban and a Tahoe
at the NWC and both liked their choices.

Any comments on tow vehicles?

Ronnie

http://fishing.about.com








Dwayne E. Cooper September 19th, 2006 01:29 AM

Tow Vehicle
 
On Mon, 18 Sep 2006 11:35:43 -0500, "Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers"
wrote:

Have you seen the 2007 Suburban? The Suburban used to be a rompin',
stompin' 4 wheel drive vehicle that you could load the wife and kids into
and go anywhere. Not anymore. I think my wife's Oldsmobile Achieva has the
same amount of ground clearance.

Unlike most 4 wheel drive owners, I actually use my 4 wheel drive and go
off-road more than a gravel driveway. I guarantee that if I owned a new
Suburban, the thing would be torn up inside of 6 months.


I gotta agree with Steve on this one. The new Tahoes/Suburbans
are extremely disappointing IMO. It's definitely "not your father's
SUV" anymore...as it doesn't have enough clearance or toughness where
I could trust it to get to some of my fishing holes or hunting spots.

Probably why I'm still driving my 96 Tahoe...

--
Dwayne E. Cooper, Atty at Law
Indianapolis, IN
Email:
Web Page:
http://www.cooperlegalservices.com
Personal Fishing Web Page: http://www.hoosierwebsites.com/OnTheWater
Dog Fishing: http://www.hoosierwebsites.com/onthe...fishing040.htm
1st Annual ROFB Classic Winner

WARREN WOLK September 19th, 2006 05:35 PM

Tow Vehicle
 
didn't deisel fuel used to cost significantly less than regular?

warren

"Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers" wrote in
message ...

"Dan, danl, Redbeard uh Greybeard now" wrote in
message SNIP

Bill & all,

Regarding the diesel. I have read that the new diesel fuels required
by the EPA will reduce mileage greatly. Not sure of the debut date. I
have heard estimates up to 25%. This will get better once the
Manufactures bring out engines designed for the new fuel but it will
take 5 years or so for mileage to increase to current levels or
better. Then there is another change in fuels scheduled and the
mileage will drop again.

Not sure if it will happen like this but it is something to consider
and research.


Dan,

This is all scheduled to happen by the end of 2006 as mandated by the EPA
Clean Air Act of 2006. That's the main reason why I traded in my Duramax
diesel on basically the same truck, just with the 6.0 litre gas engine.

I figure, why pay a minimum of 10 cents a gallon more and get less
performance? Plus, while I loved the horsepower, performance and towing
capabilities of my diesel, I don't miss the diesel exhaust smell nor the
added hassle of finding diesel fuel at gas stations. There are an amazing
amount of small towns that don't have diesel fuel.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com




Henry Hefner September 19th, 2006 06:12 PM

Tow Vehicle
 

WARREN WOLK wrote:
didn't deisel fuel used to cost significantly less than regular?

warren


When my boss put me in a deisel F250 about 2000 or 2001, gas around
here was about $1.00, and deisel was about $0.70. I think it was about
2004 that they swapped around.


Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers September 21st, 2006 03:41 AM

Tow Vehicle
 

"WARREN WOLK" wrote in message
news:j%UPg.9498$2P3.427@trnddc02...
didn't deisel fuel used to cost significantly less than regular?


Actually, from what I was told, diesel fuel is a by-product of the
manufacture process for making gasoline. In 2001 when I bought my diesel,
gas was 15 - 20 cents a gallon higher than diesel. When diesel came even
and was even 10 cents higher, I was willing to put up with the cost because
of the great performance I got and the towing power, as well as higher
milage.

When I read in the Milwaukee Journal business section that the diesel fuel
had to be reformulated to meet the Clean Air Act, and that current
technology engines wouldn't have the same power or economy, with 110,000
miles on my truck, I decided to make the change back to gas.

I'm sure that when it's time to trade this truck in, I'll look at diesels
again.
--
Steve @ OutdoorFrontiers
http://www.outdoorfrontiers.com
G & S Guide Service and Custom Rods
http://www.herefishyfishy.com




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