Hi !
im a newbie ..I’m planning to buy a new 2020 Tab 400 and a new vehicule ....Im thinking to buy a VW Atlas cross sport 2020 V6 3.6L with a towing capacity of 5000 pounds...is it gonna be enough to tow my Tab 400 !
Thanks for your help!
Harold Boulanger :-) 🇺🇸🇨🇦🌈
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Draco dormiens numquam titilandus.
A starting point might be to stop by your VW dealer and copy an Atlas VIN number down then visit the VW owners web-page and download the Owners manual (VIN required). See what the OM has on towing.
Might also review posting here or Message owners of other brand Mid-size SUV to hear how their towing experience is going. Of special interest might be how FWD vs AWD (VW 4-Motion) handle towing duty.
For myself, I would not purchase an Atlas T@B400 Combination . . . however, I live and travel in the western U.S. states and 66% of my TV miles are towing my T@B.
Atlas max tongue weight: 500#, T@B400 will be in the 370 - 450# range
Frontal Area; typical mid-size SUV: 40 sq ft, T@B400 is 65 sq ft.
TV: '17 Colorado V6 Z71 4x4, Tow Package, GM Brake Controller
Adventures: 54 Nights: 341 Towing Miles 43,780
2020 Audi SQ5
https://www.roadandtrack.com/car-culture/a29339668/how-truck-tow-rating-is-calculated/
2020 Audi SQ5
Merci beaucoup!🇺🇸🇨🇦🌈
cheers
On a personal note, I am a bit disappointed in the Atlas as I have a VW Jetta that has been very good, my boss drives a Toureag and is a fan and his wife has an Atlas, BUT they don't tow with it. I kind of thought about maybe my next TV when I retire instead of my dual function work pickup/Tab TV vehicle, but am on the fence.
EDIT to add I found a thread here where a member is towing a 400, BUT about maxed on hitch weight, some sag and VW does NOT recommend a WDH. So I guess it can be done, still would do more research before deciding.
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/comment/132193#Comment_132193
I have an Excel worksheet that you might find handy that helps calculate this all out - drop me a private message here and I'll find a way to get it to you.
Here's how the numbers shook out for me. If you're not familiar with how the math works here, I strongly suggest you do a bit of research on your own, but I'll try to break things down a little as I go in the hopes of shedding light rather than adding to the confusion. Stay with me :-)
The GCWVR - the maximum the tow vehicle and trailer can weigh altogether - is 10,150.
The GVWR of the Atlas (the maxium weight it can carry, including itself, passengers, cargo, and tongue weight of trailer) is 6,019 pounds.
The curb weight is 4,500.
Typically your payload (the amount of people and stuff you can carry, including the trailer tongue weight) is the difference between these two, which would be 1,519 pounds. Often manufacturers list a specific payload rating that is different. Volkswagen did, and for my Atlas, that number is 1,113. Note the 406 pound difference here. That *suggests* that VW has included the weight of a driver and passenger in their calculations - some manufacturers do that, while others do not - so when we make our calculations, we'll want to run the math both ways since we don't know for sure if that was their method here.
My 2019 T@B 400 standard model weighs 2,700 pounds dry. Add 37 pounds for a full tank of propane, 250 pounds for a full fresh water tank and, allow another 100 pounds for "stuff" in the camper (we travel light), and the real weight comes out to around 3,100 pounds.
That puts me well under the 5,000 towing limit and well under the 10,150 GCVWR rating. So far, so good.
The published tongue weight on my 400 is 385 pounds. There is some speculation that NuCamp was a little light on quoting this figure, but for now, that's what we'll use. A full tank of propane brings that closer to 425. We're getting a little tight here - 85% of the allowable tongue weight - but we haven't exceeded it. Note that I haven't added anything to the tongue weight for the water, as the 400 is relatively short and the tanks are all located pretty much over the axel, resulting in a balanced front/rear weight distribution on the water regardless of what tank it happens to be in at any given time.
Now onto payload. The tongue weight counts as payload, as does any stuff you're carrying in the back of the Atlas. As I said, we travel light, so even with a 10x10 pop up tent, portable grill, a couple of chairs, charcoal, firewood, and a few tools, I'm adding maybe 100 pounds of extra weight on the high side. That brings my payload up to 550 pounds, so I'm 563 pounds under my payload capacity which gives me a little wiggle room to add another passenger or a bit more cargo to the Atlas, but not much. *This assumes VW has factored in a driver and passenger.*
If they have not, we'll need to add that weight back in as part of the payload. In my case, a driver and passenger combined adds 350 pounds. Now I'm within 213 pounds of my payload. Adding another passenger or any other cargo (including, say, a small generator) is pretty much out of the question. I'm maxed out.
Payload is where most tow vehicles max out first. Everyone looks at the tow weight rating and the tongue weight and forgets about payload, or doesn't understand that the tongue weight of the trailer and often the passenges count toward payload. Payload isn't just stuff in the bed of a truck (or the cargo area of an SUV).
For us, the Atlas works ok, but primarily because we travel light, we don't take extra passengers with us, and we aren't dealing with steep grades and hills here in Ohio like someone in the west might as our trips are limited to within a couple of hours of where we live.
The back end does sag a bit, enough to affect headlight alignment at night. The low beams turn into high beams and the high beams light up the trees. I'm planning to add a set of airbags to the rear coils to help lift it up. Please note that airbags do nothing to increase any rated capacity nor to they re-distribute weight.
Sway has not been an issue yet pulling the 400. It feels very stable at 60MPH (the fastest I care to go when towing). Volkswagen outright prohibits the use of a weight distribution hitch on the Atlas. The vehicle and hitch are not capable of withstanding the upward force a weight distribution hitch would apply.
In terms of power, the V6 in the Atlas is plenty powerful enough for me. This isn't a sports car. When pulling the 400, it never seems to struggle, though it will of course downshift more often even on small grades. Gas mileage gets cut in half, so instead of 24-25MPG on the highway, it's down to 12-13MPG when towing. That penalty is not unique to the Atlas; many tow vehicles burn twice as much fuel when towing. Despite its teardrop shape, the 400 presents a fairly substantial frontal area against the wind and isn't as "slippery" as you'd think.
To sum things up, I've very happy with the Atlas as a daily driver. It's well-appointed and comfortable. The 4Motion is great here in Ohio winters. The rear seat is huge. The third row seat can actually be used by adults. The cargo area is massive. The Cross Sport is smaller and lacks the third row, but it's no slouch in terms of rear cargo size either.
It is adequate for pulling the 400 in the way that we camp, but if I had to do it all over again, I would have gone for a 1/2 ton pickup configured for maximum towing and maximum payload to give us more wiggle room on both tongue weight and payload. It would also have set us up better down the road if we ever wanted to move to a larger or heavier camper.
Hope that helps some.
Jim
She ended up leaving her car at the gas station and catching a ride north with another couple.
GM, Ford, Chrysler are about all I will own in a tow vehicle. Every small town as a mechanic that can repair them and most NAPAs have the parts on the shelf. I can't imagine the tow bill in in the southwest to get somewhere they can repair an import.
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