Good Sam Club Open Roads Forum: any problems or suggestions for towing a honda crv.
Open Roads Forum Already a member? Login here.   If not, Register Today!  |  Help

Newest  |  Active  |  Popular  |  RVing FAQ Forum Rules  |  Forum Help and Support  |  Contact

Search:   Advanced Search

Search only in Dinghy Towing

Open Roads Forum  >  Dinghy Towing

 > any problems or suggestions for towing a honda crv.

This Topic Is Closed  |  Print Topic  |  Post New Topic  | 
EASY.RIDER

Mo

Full Member

Joined: 10/06/2009

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member

Offline
Posted: 04/12/12 11:43am Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Has anyone had problems with towing a honda crv? or any suggestions for me on towing this vehicle? also, it has a 2.4l engine, seems a little underpowered.

OldHatt45

New Jersey

New Member

Joined: 11/04/2008

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member

Offline
Posted: 04/12/12 12:27pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Don't know what year your CR-V is, but I do know that you need to be mindful of supplying power to the CR-V from the Coach.
Most people i know (me included) run a power lead in the umbilical from the Coach to the CR-V. Usually a blue wire, but your umbilical may be different. The power lead MUST be fused and go straight to the battery of the CR-V.

That's about the only gotcha. If you don't have a power lead, your battery will almost certainly go dead after towing for a full day, without being run.

Drew

othertonka

Stockton, CA

Senior Member

Joined: 11/15/2003

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member


Posted: 04/12/12 01:42pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Just be sure and follow the shifting procedure prior to towing. It is in the owners manual, look in the index under "Towing behind a Motor home" Basicaly it involves starting the car in Park, shifting to R, then N, then D, then 2, then 1, then back to 2, then to D, and then back to neutral, stop right there, then let the engine run 3 minutes. Turn off the radio and the AC/Heater fan. Shut the key off to the I position which will leave the steering wheel unlocked. Good for 8 hours at speeds up to but not more than 65 MPH. Runnng a battery charge wire back from the MH to the CRV is a good idea to keep the battery charged while towing. Have towed my CRV about 40,000 miles with no problems using this procedure. Do this every day before you tow.


Othertonka
2004 Southwind 32VS 8.1 Workhorse chassis
2002 CRV Toad
U. S. Gear Unified brake system
Retired Fire Captain, SFD


EASY.RIDER

Mo

Full Member

Joined: 10/06/2009

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member

Offline
Posted: 04/12/12 02:02pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

2008 crv, if the only problem is the battery situation I can deal with that, thanks for the suggestion.

Pixguy

NH & FL

Full Member

Joined: 03/11/2009

View Profile


Offline
Posted: 04/15/12 12:14pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

It's a great tow, so just follow the previous suggestions.

Good luck!


2007 5320LX NRV Dolphin on Ford Chassis
2010 CRV Toad w/ Readybrake system

RAMPY

South Florida

Full Member

Joined: 03/12/2003

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member

Offline
Posted: 04/15/12 03:01pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Great tow vehicle...I've towed my 2004 for 65,000 miles. No problems but be sure to follow the advice from an earlier post. I also pull the #7 fuse only because I am very conservative on these things, it's no big deal.


Jack and Mary
2004 DSDP (4010)
2012 Honda CRV
Falcon and BrakeBuddy
FMCA:F337928

chevylover1965

Southern CA

Senior Member

Joined: 10/27/2004

View Profile


Offline
Posted: 04/16/12 06:50pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

othertonka wrote:

Just be sure and follow the shifting procedure prior to towing. It is in the owners manual, look in the index under "Towing behind a Motor home" Basicaly it involves starting the car in Park, shifting to R, then N, then D, then 2, then 1, then back to 2, then to D, and then back to neutral, stop right there, then let the engine run 3 minutes. Turn off the radio and the AC/Heater fan. Shut the key off to the I position which will leave the steering wheel unlocked. Good for 8 hours at speeds up to but not more than 65 MPH. Runnng a battery charge wire back from the MH to the CRV is a good idea to keep the battery charged while towing. Have towed my CRV about 40,000 miles with no problems using this procedure. Do this every day before you tow.


X2 or 3 or whatever. Excellent advice. The CR-V is a joy to tow.


06 Tiffin Phaeton 40 QDH
Freightliner, CAT
08 Honda CRV EXL/NAV
Roadmaster Falcon All Terrain tow bar/US Gear
FBINA 144


EASY.RIDER

Mo

Full Member

Joined: 10/06/2009

View Profile



Good Sam RV Club Member

Offline
Posted: 04/18/12 07:44am Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Thanks to all for your suggestions. am looking forward to my first trip towing my car.
tom

evandodds

Charlotte, NC

New Member

Joined: 04/07/2010

View Profile


Offline
Posted: 04/21/12 07:13pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Just to echo and reinforce the point about power - we ran the battery all the way down three days in a row towing our 2012 CRV. Manual suggests "if you'll be towing more than 8 hours" pull the fuse, but this happened after only 5 hours of towing (as we discovered when it was still dead on the 3rd day after a relatively short trip). Pulling the fuse was not a great fit for us, since it also kills the 12v lighter outlet we needed for our brake buddy.

Anyway, ordered the Toad Charge kit after the first dead-battery day (which required a roadside assistance call to jump the toad... blegh - bought a battery charger that day too!), received it 2 days later, and now the thing stays charged like a champ!

This Topic Is Closed  |  Print Topic  |  Post New Topic  | 

Open Roads Forum  >  Dinghy Towing

 > any problems or suggestions for towing a honda crv.
Search:   Advanced Search

Search only in Dinghy Towing


New posts No new posts
Closed, new posts Closed, no new posts
Moved, new posts Moved, no new posts

Adjust text size:

© 2013 Good Sam Club | Terms & Conditions | PRIVACY POLICY | YOUR PRIVACY RIGHTS