PungoteagueDave
Well-known member
Yes, it is just you. If you are going to rate your trucks for towing capacity based on 45 MPH maximum speed, you ought to say that somewhere in your extensive TOWING literature, full stop. Saying the customer is responsible to read a VERY TINY footnote and then cross reference to a seperate external SAE spec sheet to only then understand that limitation is complete obfuscation of that limitation - and you know it full well. You know darn well that you (and everyone else around here) never understood that all of Ford's specs for towing incorporate a 45 MPH limit.Maybe it's just me, but if I see something that references a standard, and I need to know what that means, I look it up. It takes an extra 2 minutes to find and a few more to read the standard. I may even learn something in the process. Ford also likely lists the other information as it is not part of the standard, therefore making it pertinent information to add.
Also, surface area is a huge factor at speed. 10,000 lbs of steel will have barely any surface area for wind resistance, whereas a fiberglass tank that may weight 2,000 lbs but had a huge surface area may actually present more issues towing. I'm pretty sure the towing standard is closer to the former than the latter in that they use a flat trailer and put a relatively low profile load on it. It probably would take you less time to look up and read the standard than the amount of time you've spent reading, responding, and complaining about it here.
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