RTinVa Report post Posted March 14, 2015 I am currently driving a Fleetwood 38b 360hp diesel pusher. My wife and I usually tow the 2010 TSX on our Kar Kaddy SS. I recently bought a 2015 Ram Laramie Crew Cab short bed 4x4 and would like to tow 4 down but have no experience with this type of towing. Although I have enjoyed the dolly experience and have no complaints I am anxious to have the option of bringing the truck on long trips. Please provide your recommendations for equipment based on experience. I do not want to buy one then wish I had bought another. It appears the total cost will be a estimated 3k not including installation. Thank you in advance for any advice, experiences and recommendations. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CarlAda Report post Posted March 14, 2015 Either Blue Ox or Roadmaster provide excellent products. I don't think you'd go wrong with either one of them. I use the Roadmaster set up and have been quite pleased. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
wolfe10 Report post Posted March 15, 2015 My only question is about the WEIGHT of the new truck and your coach's towing capacity AND GCWR. Agree on the two manufacturers-- both with quality products. We have towed with Roadmaster gear (tow bar, brackets and brake) for the last three toads and 200,000+ miles. No problems. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
RTinVa Report post Posted March 15, 2015 My only question is about the WEIGHT of the new truck and your coach's towing capacity AND GCWR. Agree on the two manufacturers-- both with quality products. We have towed with Roadmaster gear (tow bar, brackets and brake) for the last three toads and 200,000+ miles. No problems. Wolfe10, 42,400 on the GCWR and within the specs on towing capacity. The Fleetwood has the coach listed as 32,400 GVWR. Based on the numbers I am not seeing any concerns. The truck comes in at 5250 curb weight. I see Roadmaster or Blue Ox are recommended often. Thank you for your recommendations and if I am missing something please correct me. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
huffypuff Report post Posted March 15, 2015 I use the Roadmaster Falcon All Terrain for My Jeep Liberty diesel at 4500 lbs. Its rated for 6000 lbs but that seem to be close to your weight limit. http://roadmasterinc.com/products/towbars/falconat.html The next more stronger one rated at 10,000 lbs would be better. http://roadmasterinc.com/products/towbars/blackhawk2.html I use the portable braking system because my Jeep is a 2006 so it may not last too much longer. http://roadmasterinc.com/products/braking/even_brake.html Since what you have is new this will be less hassle once installed. http://roadmasterinc.com/products/braking/invisibrake/index.html Since your vehicle is new, you may want to protect it. I use this and it is easy to install and remove. http://roadmasterinc.com/products/protection_storage/protect_store.html Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
CarlAda Report post Posted March 15, 2015 For brakes, I use the SMI Stay-in-Play Duo on my toad (07 Cadillac CTS). The AirForce One also gets top reviews. I like the SMI Stay-in-Play Duo because it's easy to use. Install once and it's just a matter of flipping a switch to on and it's ready to go -- no box in front seat floorboard, no attachment to brake pedal to set up and take down....just a really nice unit. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
manholt Report post Posted March 15, 2015 Hi Rich. I towed a 07', 2500 Chevy Duramax 4x4 Crew Cab, with a 10,000# Blue Ox. Bought it and had it installed, with a brake master, at CW for $ 2396 in 08'. After about, 4 months and towing 3 times, I got a Jeep Wrangler for toad. Back then I felt like the "tail was wagging the dog"! Good luck! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
huffypuff Report post Posted March 15, 2015 The InvisiBrake® hooks up to your lights and charges your battery just by plugging into the coach. It also take care of tail, brake and turn signal on tow vehicle. No switch to flip and you have monitor in the coach. Check this link of Roadmaster vs competitors http://roadmasterinc.com/pdf/inv_comp.pdf Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jleamont Report post Posted March 15, 2015 I run Demco commander tow bar and blue ox Apollo brake, Jeep Wrangler all 4 down. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
manholt Report post Posted March 16, 2015 InvisiBrake and Roadmaster 6000#! I'm currently having a Lexan box being built to hold brake in a water and dust proof environment. Carl Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
gbrinck Report post Posted March 16, 2015 We use a Blue Ox Aventa tow bar and the Brakemaster air-driven brake from Roadmaster. Previously had a Roadmaster tow bar and that was good too. I suggest the one of the top end models of tow bar from either company - those are much more convenient than the basic A-frame types. More expensive, of course, but worth it IMO. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
jlandon13399 Report post Posted March 16, 2015 I use Blue OC for towing and Air Force One for braking. No problems with either one. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Walt2137 Report post Posted March 18, 2015 Roadmaster and Blue Ox are both good, I have always used Roadmaster until recently, when I need to go to a 10,000 lb tow bar the Roadmaster Blackhawk 10,000 will cost $950+ but you can get a Blue Ox Aventa BX7445 10,000 tow bar new on EBay for $629 including 10,000 cables ( I paid $575 last year) you will have to buy the Roadmaster ends if you go with the Roadmaster Brackets. I also use Roadmaster Brakemaster toad brake sys, it uses the coach air to mash the toad brakes, I used a 48 inch LED light strip (Ebay) Attached to the bottom lip of my tail gate of my F150 for my toad brakes, that way the turn signals won't be covered by my toad brake lights when my brake sys mashes my toad brakes. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites