Help me select a tow vehicle/snow plow
#1
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Help me select a tow vehicle/snow plow
Before I can finally achieve my ultimate goal and build a dedicated track-Eliminator, I need to do a few things:
- Build a new house with a yuuuuge garage
- get a tow vehicle and trailer
Considering that the Eliminator is not well protected from the elements, a fully enclosed trailer would be the way to go I guess. Hate to have wet Megasquirt and spark plugs.
The new house will have a loooong driveway and I'm not going to shovel that by hand. I need a vehicle with a plow. My current daily is a Taurus SHO. While it does have AWD, it's not a great tow vehicle (only up to 1000lbs) and there are no snow-plow attachments for it, as far as I know. The wife drives a Mazda CX-5, but I don't think it's up to towing a racecar trailer either and I haven't found any trustworthy looking plows for it. I got the Taurus until at least the end of 2018, so I need something in the meantime.
What's an affordable vehicle to tow a trailer to track events and attach a plow? I'm talking used and less than $5k. If you could sleep in it (meaning at least fit a 6' roll-up mat) at the track, that would be a plus. It doesn't have to have all the creature comforts- it will only be used for towing and plowing. But I don't want to spend a lot of time fixing up the tow-rig. And I would like to get most of my investment back when I sell it in a few years- I hope the get an F150 Raptor after the Taurus.
- Build a new house with a yuuuuge garage
- get a tow vehicle and trailer
Considering that the Eliminator is not well protected from the elements, a fully enclosed trailer would be the way to go I guess. Hate to have wet Megasquirt and spark plugs.
The new house will have a loooong driveway and I'm not going to shovel that by hand. I need a vehicle with a plow. My current daily is a Taurus SHO. While it does have AWD, it's not a great tow vehicle (only up to 1000lbs) and there are no snow-plow attachments for it, as far as I know. The wife drives a Mazda CX-5, but I don't think it's up to towing a racecar trailer either and I haven't found any trustworthy looking plows for it. I got the Taurus until at least the end of 2018, so I need something in the meantime.
What's an affordable vehicle to tow a trailer to track events and attach a plow? I'm talking used and less than $5k. If you could sleep in it (meaning at least fit a 6' roll-up mat) at the track, that would be a plus. It doesn't have to have all the creature comforts- it will only be used for towing and plowing. But I don't want to spend a lot of time fixing up the tow-rig. And I would like to get most of my investment back when I sell it in a few years- I hope the get an F150 Raptor after the Taurus.
#8
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I don't think the full tractor will be needed. When I'm saying long driveway, I'm comparing to my current 40' DW
The new one will be maybe 150'-200' or so. So a BA lawn tractor with a snow-blower would likely take care of that. Are we talking the more-fun hydraulic drive lawn tractors, or should I go with a traditional gear-drive and steering wheel setup?
Also the lawn tractor likely won't do double-duty as a tow-rig. So we still need to solve that problem. According to Google (the most reliable source of technical information known to mankind) the CX5 has a max. tow capacity rating of 2000lbs- not sufficient for an enclosed trailer plus Eliminator.
The new one will be maybe 150'-200' or so. So a BA lawn tractor with a snow-blower would likely take care of that. Are we talking the more-fun hydraulic drive lawn tractors, or should I go with a traditional gear-drive and steering wheel setup?
Also the lawn tractor likely won't do double-duty as a tow-rig. So we still need to solve that problem. According to Google (the most reliable source of technical information known to mankind) the CX5 has a max. tow capacity rating of 2000lbs- not sufficient for an enclosed trailer plus Eliminator.
#10
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Cool idea
Not sure about precise dimensions. It's a Miata with the ends cut off, so I'd guess just over 10' long. And roughly the same width- you need 1" spacers in the front, so maybe an inch wider. I'd guess 60"-64" wide.
Now on to google interior dimensions of panel-vans. Then on to painting it white, put on a Hawaii shirt and hang around in the vicinity of playgrounds.
Not sure about precise dimensions. It's a Miata with the ends cut off, so I'd guess just over 10' long. And roughly the same width- you need 1" spacers in the front, so maybe an inch wider. I'd guess 60"-64" wide.
Now on to google interior dimensions of panel-vans. Then on to painting it white, put on a Hawaii shirt and hang around in the vicinity of playgrounds.
#11
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The last generation "extended bed" Ford Econoline has an interior cargo length of about 12', and a height of 55" so that would do. But the width between the wheel houses is just 52", which definitely won't do. It's probably enough between the actual walls though. Maybe the interior is just tall enough to have the Eliminator sit ABOVE the wheel houses. Basically just keep the upward angle from the ramps going inside the van. A buddy of mine has a rusted out Econoline sitting behind his house- I'll take some measurements.
#13
Putting the car inside a van sounds like a really bad idea.
For cheap tow vehicles I'd look at late 90s/early 2000s 3/4 ton Suburbans. Lots of people bought them as macho minivans, so it's not too hard to find one that's never gone further off road than the mall parking lot and thus isn't beat to ****.
--Ian
For cheap tow vehicles I'd look at late 90s/early 2000s 3/4 ton Suburbans. Lots of people bought them as macho minivans, so it's not too hard to find one that's never gone further off road than the mall parking lot and thus isn't beat to ****.
--Ian
#17
We have a 150ish ft driveway, two car widths wide and 4 wide at the bottom. We have just been using a big Snapper walk behind snow blower for the last 16 years. Works great, takes about 45min if you don't include cleaning the cars off and shuffling them around.
For towing, I always figured I woukd just buy one of the V8 body on frame work vans. Should be cheap and easy to get parts for, can sleep in it just fine as well.
For towing, I always figured I woukd just buy one of the V8 body on frame work vans. Should be cheap and easy to get parts for, can sleep in it just fine as well.
#20
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We have a 150ish ft driveway, two car widths wide and 4 wide at the bottom. We have just been using a big Snapper walk behind snow blower for the last 16 years. Works great, takes about 45min if you don't include cleaning the cars off and shuffling them around.
For towing, I always figured I woukd just buy one of the V8 body on frame work vans. Should be cheap and easy to get parts for, can sleep in it just fine as well.
For towing, I always figured I woukd just buy one of the V8 body on frame work vans. Should be cheap and easy to get parts for, can sleep in it just fine as well.
That being said, I like the idea of a V8 work van as a tow rig. Plenty of space to nap in and store parts and tools. It won't really need 4WD, so we're good there.