slateya
Well-Known Member
I suspect motor cooling. Tow rating applies at all speeds, grades, continues duty. A lot of cost can be trimmed by not trying to build a vehicle to stay cool and functioning with an extra 2-3.5k lbs up hill at 80 mph in 100 degrees.Commercial teardrop trailers are out of my price range. They sure do look pretty. There is a reddit group, lots of websites, and at least one book on DIY building. As I understand it, teardrops started after WW2 and were mostly a home built rig for ten or twenty years.
I would hope to build one for < $3000. And have a finished weight under 800 pounds. Maybe 1100# with the fixed gear, the rest can ride in the truck bed. Close enough to fit Slate towing limit in my book.
But I am curious about what the limiting factors are with Slate. Do you think it is overheating the motor?
Hopefully there would be a towing upgrade option. Certainly I think a 4000# vehicle should handle 2000#. Ideally it would get up to Airstream Bambi 16' levels, 2500#. But maybe frontal area figures into it too.
I busted my first two trucks. Making a trash run with '63 F100 rust bucket. Just a normal amount of bagged trash in the bed, but towing my brother-in-law's 10' trailer that maybe had more than it looked like. I look in the side rear view mirror and the driver side wheel is 2' out from the truck. Turns out there was a small metal plate that holds the axle in, it had failed. I did fix it myself I think. The part was cheap.
Think of battery, controller, wiring, and motor. Lots to keep cool on electric vehicles.