catinmoon wrote:HI folks,
More and more newer vehicles have the rounded rear windows that seem to really reduce visibility. I'm wondering what are the best tow vehicles (teardrop towing) that you can think of or have driven that allow visibility out the windows all around. It doesn't need to be a brand new vehicle, but I really need reliability as I'm out on the road with my pets and like to avoid breakdowns (of course who doesn't, but you get my drift).
Suggestions? I do NOT want to rely on a backup camera. I have had good luck with an older Toyota Tacoma, and a Ford Van (E350, but it was too high up for my use as it was a 4wd).
Thanks,
Stephanie
rainjer wrote:That is a very subjective question. How big is your trailer? My teardrop is only 4' wide. I have towed it with a 2004 Jeep Liberty, 2001 Dodge Caravan, 2014 Subaru Outback, 2003 2WD Ford Ranger extended cab (with and without a canopy) and a 4WD Toyota Tacoma double cab (with and without a canopy). All have some blind spots and challenges. The length of the tow rig will change your vision. My liberty was a short cabin so I had a lot more vision and could see better out the back at angles for lane changes. The Caravan I could not use the rear window at all for lane changes. the angles would not let me see past the trailer. With my Tacoma I can look over the top and because it s wider I can see completely around it with my side mirrors. In the Subaru it fills the rear window and I see some of the trailer in the mirror. Towing without my canopy on both truck gave me the most vision...
Jeremy
tony.latham wrote:You mention the back-up camera. Are you talking about normal cruising visibility or are you talking about backing?![]()
Tony
lfhoward wrote:I have to add my +1 for the Jeep Liberty. The visibility is excellent, it can turn on a dime, and it can have up to a 5000# tow rating (or 2000# without the tow package). It's also quite reliable for an SUV (both the V6 engine and transmission). Gas mileage and brute power are not its strong suits, but all in all it's a great vehicle IMO. Plus it never gets stuck with the low range 4WD.
catinmoon wrote:lfhoward wrote:I have to add my +1 for the Jeep Liberty. The visibility is excellent, it can turn on a dime, and it can have up to a 5000# tow rating (or 2000# without the tow package). It's also quite reliable for an SUV (both the V6 engine and transmission). Gas mileage and brute power are not its strong suits, but all in all it's a great vehicle IMO. Plus it never gets stuck with the low range 4WD.
do they still make this model?
Padilen wrote:catinmoon wrote:lfhoward wrote:I have to add my +1 for the Jeep Liberty. The visibility is excellent, it can turn on a dime, and it can have up to a 5000# tow rating (or 2000# without the tow package). It's also quite reliable for an SUV (both the V6 engine and transmission). Gas mileage and brute power are not its strong suits, but all in all it's a great vehicle IMO. Plus it never gets stuck with the low range 4WD.
do they still make this model?
No the Liberty isn't made any longer. 2012 was the last year.
Miss mine, while not my favorite vehicle my V10 was that. My Liberty was my BEST vehicle.
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catinmoon wrote:Just found this list online, from a Consumer Reports article in 2016.
Some of these might not be good tow vehicles. I currently have a Subaru Legacy Wagon (last year they made the non-outback version of the wagon). it has not been a joy to own. I like driving it but have had so many repairs, in contrast to my 1996 legacy wagon which was pretty much bulletproof. I'd just really like to have something a bit more van-like.
Best Cars for Visibility
Subaru Forester
Subaru Outback
Subaru Legacy
Land Rover Range Rover
Land Rover Range Rover Sport
Honda Fit
Mercedes E-Class
Honda Accord
Nissan Altima
Worst Cars for Visibility
Nissan Z
Porsche Boxster
Honda CR-Z
Buick Encore
Infiniti QX70
Toyota Tundra
Nissan Pathfinder
Smart ForTwo
Jeep Wrangler
tony.latham wrote:catinmoon wrote:Back-up cams, because they are so wide-angled, are a great help in hitching but of little or no value in backing.
dancam wrote:Mounting 3 backup cameras to the trailer would be cheaper than buying a new tow vehicle, but if you want visibility buy this:
Old, cheap, big, and reasonably reliable. My parents has 700,000km on it now. 21ft bumper to bumper. Not too terrible on diesel. Can pull a lot more than a td, lol. Can put a lot in the back too, thats 3200 pounds of hay in the box and the suspensions hardly moved.
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