D100 pull my Duster?

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Simple. Do what I did. Look up the towing capacity of your vehicle. That ends the discussion. I did it for him, he can tow 4500 lbs. That covers the Duster and an aluminum trailer.
Kinda reinforces what I tried to say with my initial response, as up until that time no one had brought it up.
 
PBR used to pull his Duster to the track with a car..... :)
Heard a story once, in the hayday of drag racing, where a particular guy would rent a hemi (the 426 kind) and tow his rolling chassis of a race car to the track

Once there, he would pull the 426 out of the rental, drop it in the roller and go racing
 
It will pull the trailer and car just make sure you have the brakes working on the trailer.
It doesn’t take much power to roll down the highway until you get to hills or need to accelerate from the stop sign. Take extra coolant and be patient you’ll get there.
 

didn't have working trailer brakes and low gear on a torqueflite ain't gonna hold back 4000# on 11%. I was young and using a truck that had no business pulling that much weight, very dumb move.
I came back from LA [late 80's] with a 66 Bel-II [383/4-speed], pulling a 20ft open trailer with no brakes, loaded with a 65 Dart GT and about 2-3 thousand pounds of Ford FE parts[long story].
The car was manual steering and drum brakes. We were coming east out of the mountains from Kally to Utah. I smoked the brakes, over-revved the piss outta the 383-down shifting, and could smell lots of clutch. There were a dozen turns I was sure we were gonna die on. We finally got to pretty level earth, and laughed our scared-to-death asses off. The whole rig looked like something from Sanford and Son. Now, I've pulled with my 22 year-old Cummins dually [bought new], proper hitch equipment, and my 28ft trailer with real tires and brakes on it.

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It's towed larger trailers, of mine....
post dually rig at Salem.jpg
 
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Heard a story once, in the hayday of drag racing, where a particular guy would rent a hemi (the 426 kind) and tow his rolling chassis of a race car to the track

Once there, he would pull the 426 out of the rental, drop it in the roller and go racing
I'm curious, who was renting 426 Hemi's back in the day????
I'm almost 80, been a car nut my whole life. never have I heard of Rent-a-Hemi.
 
I'm curious, who was renting 426 Hemi's back in the day????
I'm almost 80, been a car nut my whole life. never have I heard of Rent-a-Hemi.
I wish I knew

I know I didn't make this memory up, but when I tried to Google it a while ago I can up empty

I might ask one of the AIs to Snoop it out
 
It seems I remember Don Garlits telling a story about renting a Hemi but I could be wrong. I do remember the story, I just cannot remember for sure where I heard it came from.
 
i had i 79 ford f100 300/6 auto towed a lot of junk around (when i was flipping cars )
had to tow my suburban home ,got home tried going up my drive-way had it to the floor it got 1/3 the way up and wouldn't move
never had that ever happen in anything like that ,she just didn't have enough giddy,unloaded and drove them both up
my dakota 3.9 2wd towed a lot too a few time at 80% of red line for 10min in second pulling the hills ...not a good feeling
now my 12 ram 1500 hemi never felt under powered
 
I think there’s been a really important point that no one has mentioned yet, and that point being the weight of the tow vehicle versus the weight (mass) of what is being towed. What is the RATED tow capacity of this truck, as well as the GCVWR? Can the /6 pull it? Possibly. But are the brakes, frame, et al, up to the task?

As someone who has survived a “death wobble” twice in my life (once as a kid, the second time about 10 years ago), I can’t emphasize enough the importance of taking this into consideration.

To the OP: I agree wholeheartedly with @fishmens67 here, and I no longer two anything “heavy” behind a light duty, 1/2 ton truck, “upgraded hitch” or no.

Edit add: There are formulas one can use to determine if a tow vehicle is capable of pulling a given load, but an easier thing to do would be to jump on Uhaul’s site and use their online towing combination tool. If the results come back negative, never assume you’re a REALLY good driver and/or are smarter than the Laws of Physics. Been there, done that…..don't ever want to do it again.
Good point!
 
I will say it again. The '88 1/2 T /6 truck I had was a good one! I had it back around early 2000's for a while. It was NOT wore out! Towed a full size A or B down the rolling hills of Missouri NO issue once rolling!b 4 speed OD or in other words its a 3 speed with an OD> Geared like a 3 speed in the first 3 gears!v Only issue I had was getting it rolling. I was always it would be way hard on the clutch. Probably so. IF it had a real 4 speed with the low first gear, it would not have been an issue.
It was a great truck but not great for pulling a loaded car trailer. Did I get by for awhile? yea.

Pulling such with no brakes with a 1/2 t. ??? You better be able to keep your distance and know how to get it stopped.
My currect car trailer was bought new about 25 years ago, never have used the brakes on it but it was pulled 95% of the time with a 1 t pickup. The brakes rusted shut probably 20 years ago! :BangHead:
 
I'm curious, who was renting 426 Hemi's back in the day????
I'm almost 80, been a car nut my whole life. never have I heard of Rent-a-Hemi.
I asked 2 "sources", Google and chatGPT

Google said:


AI Overview



+2
It sounds like you're referring to the stories and legends surrounding the Shelby GT350H "Rent-A-Racer" program.
While there's a myth that people would rent these cars and swap out the high-performance engines for use in their own race cars before returning them with less powerful engines, a former owner of a rental GT350H stated that the real story involved a wrecked car that was purchased after being taken out of service, not an active rental being stripped for parts.
However, the Shelby GT350H was indeed rented out, and stories of people renting them specifically to race them are well-known. The Hertz "Rent-A-Racer" program was a way to make these powerful Mustangs accessible to more people, and some undoubtedly took full advantage of the opportunity to take them on the track.


ChatGPT said:​

You're thinking of "Dandy" Dick Landy, a legendary drag racer from the 1960s and 1970s.
However, the specific story you're referring to—renting cars with 426 HEMIs and swapping the engines into race cars—is most commonly associated with early drag racers exploiting Chrysler’s street HEMI program in the mid-'60s. While it may not be attributed to just one racer, several racers were known to rent or buy 426 HEMI-equipped cars, particularly Dodge Coronets and Plymouth Belvederes, and pull the engines for racing purposes.
One racer often mentioned in these tales is Don "Big Daddy" Garlits, another iconic figure in drag racing, though there's no firm documentation tying him directly to that specific rental-car-swap trick.
Here’s what really happened:
  • In 1966–67, Chrysler released street cars with the 426 HEMI to meet NASCAR and NHRA homologation rules.
  • Some clever racers figured out they could rent a HEMI car from Hertz or another company, pull the motor to race with, and then return the car (sometimes with a lesser engine, sometimes not at all).
  • This was possible because in those days rental companies didn’t always inspect cars closely, and these racers were looking for cheap ways to get HEMI power without buying a full car.
While there isn’t a single confirmed name tied to doing this repeatedly, the legend has become a part of HEMI folklore, and names like Dick Landy, Ronnie Sox, and Garlits all swirl in the same mythos. But if you’re remembering a racer who became known for this trick, Dick Landy is probably the closest match in reputation and ingenuity.

Is this conversation helpful so far?
 
This is quickly becoming a thread even DTM would be proud of.. Steeped in facts, fiction and tales in-between. All we're missing is the Ford ranger towing stories. Or the S10 that towed across the Saharan desert at 130 degrees.
 
My truck is pretty much a twin to the OP's. 82 D150, slant and 833OD. I agree with what others have posted, when pulling a loaded trailer getting going is a clutch-slipping affair. Once moving, it does "OK" in 2nd and 3rd. I wouldn't try it in OD unless on the flats or going downhill. My slant is moderately upgraded but no kind of a beast. For as little as I'm likely to need to pull a fully loaded trailer I can live with its lack of muscle - besides, it's otherwise a hoot to drive.
 
This is my son with the D100. Had him bolt that from wheel on. I'm going to take a picture of the Hitch to see what you guys think

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