wapitibob
WKR
I have the exact specs of the op vehicle but a 2020 and the tow rating is 11,300. GVWR is 7050. The 2025 has a max tow rear axle option.
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Yours must be broken if it feels underpowered towing a side by side.I have a 2021 f150 with the same setup.. and I wouldn't wanna tow much more than my sxs with it. I found that it lacked power and fuel mileage was about 9-11 mpg. If your gonna tow something get a diesel. I got mine thinking it would be okay to tow with. It sucks
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That is what I was thinking.Yours must be broken if it feels underpowered towing a side by side.
Its not broken but if im gonna get the same milage as a diesel with less power, might as well get a diesel.Yours must be broken if it feels underpowered towing a side by side.
It's only not going to feel under powered if you've never used the proper tool. I've got a '15 F350 6.7L Powerstroke and a '25 Raptor 3.5l ecoboost. The F350 is a tank and the Raptor is a sports car in a trucks body. It's got all the low end HP you'll ever want out of a truck to get around town and play in. However, the torque and high end power isn't in the same solar system as the Powerstroke. I'm sure the Raptor would get a reasonable sized load across town, occasionally, just fine. However it's going to do a really poor job of hauling a sail at speed and its life will get cut exponentially shorter if you make that a regular practice.Yours must be broken if it feels underpowered towing a side by side.
I get 15-16 in my 7.3 F250 on the interstate if I keep it below 80. Tremor with 35s and winch, bed full of whatever...based on dump runs I am usually about 7900s empty....pulling an skid steer on 20' trailer...13ish....dont know why anyone would go eco boost if you gonna tow anything, but groceries, over any distance.I have a 2015 3.5Eco on 33" Falken 10-plys.
With a canopy and modest load, I get around 16mpg.
Same configuration towing a UTV trailer with my son's raft and the beavertail gate up, it drops to 13.
Drive it at 80mph, and it gets worse.
Re tow ratings, only Toyota drivers believe their cars are capable of using all of the tow rating.
dont know why anyone would go eco boost if you gonna tow anything, but groceries, over any distance.
Mine is '21 7.3 gas...not diesel. In '21 it was actually cheaper than similiar option F150 with 5.0 or 3.5.It's fine if it meets your weight needs and is only going to tow occasionally. The fuel mileage hit on the occasional towing trips is well worth the price vs the price of a big diesel truck when it's only going to tow occasionally. It sounds like your truck is probably part of making a living and for that, sure. It makes good sense to have a diesel 3/4 or 1 ton truck. Having a big diesel truck as a daily driver for rare towing really sucks if you care about money/value at all. That's a very expensive vehicle to buy and own if you don't NEED the extra capability it offers.
daily driver averages 18-22 cummins 6.7 Megacab 4x4.
I get 15-16 in my 7.3 F250 on the interstate if I keep it below 80. Tremor with 35s and winch, bed full of whatever...based on dump runs I am usually about 7900s empty....pulling an skid steer on 20' trailer...13ish....dont know why anyone would go eco boost if you gonna tow anything, but groceries, over any distance.
Mine is '21 7.3 gas