sheldon
#2
I do, a 20' airstream. The vehicle tows very well.
Make sure you have the right hitch and the tongue weight weight doesn't exceed the max for your hitch (it will be close at 3500lbs GW).
Obviously you need an after-market brake controller and 7-pin connector as well, the OEM setup (if you have it) is only a 4-pin unbraked connector for lights.
I would keep the speed to 60-65 or less, most especially if you're going up mountains or it's hot outside.
Unless you're towing on flat terrain in cool weather I'd get an OBDII monitor so you can watch the coolant temp. The system tries to keep it at 90*C but the gauge won't budge off the middle until over 110*C. IMO anything over 100*C is too hot while towing since the tranny is cooled by the coolant, and is probably the most stressed component while towing.
A additional tranny cooler might help, but the best solution I've heard of is to install the OEM two-fan radiator fan assembly... others have reported that will keep the coolant temp around 90*C in pretty much all conditions.
Make sure you have the right hitch and the tongue weight weight doesn't exceed the max for your hitch (it will be close at 3500lbs GW).
Obviously you need an after-market brake controller and 7-pin connector as well, the OEM setup (if you have it) is only a 4-pin unbraked connector for lights.
I would keep the speed to 60-65 or less, most especially if you're going up mountains or it's hot outside.
Unless you're towing on flat terrain in cool weather I'd get an OBDII monitor so you can watch the coolant temp. The system tries to keep it at 90*C but the gauge won't budge off the middle until over 110*C. IMO anything over 100*C is too hot while towing since the tranny is cooled by the coolant, and is probably the most stressed component while towing.
A additional tranny cooler might help, but the best solution I've heard of is to install the OEM two-fan radiator fan assembly... others have reported that will keep the coolant temp around 90*C in pretty much all conditions.
#4
No. The OBDII port is for vehicle diagnostics, it's where you plug a scan-tool in.
You can buy aftermarket gauges which read and display various engine parameters when plugged into the OBDII port.
This is the one I use. I only use it for road trips or towing, not daily driving.
You can buy aftermarket gauges which read and display various engine parameters when plugged into the OBDII port.
This is the one I use. I only use it for road trips or towing, not daily driving.
#5
Odd that you have a 7-pin with no brake controller. Perhaps a controller was installed by a PO? The PO might have kept his controller when he sold the car, leaving the wiring. Check under the steering wheel area for an unhooked wiring connector. If there is one, try to figure out which brand of controller it came from... that way you can just buy one and plug it in, vice having to do any wiring.
#6
#7
It will not have a BC from land rover, that was not an OEM option for the LR2. To add a BC, it will have to be wired into the existing 7-pin harness.
#9
No. The OBDII port is for vehicle diagnostics, it's where you plug a scan-tool in.
You can buy aftermarket gauges which read and display various engine parameters when plugged into the OBDII port.
This is the one I use. I only use it for road trips or towing, not daily driving.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
You can buy aftermarket gauges which read and display various engine parameters when plugged into the OBDII port.
This is the one I use. I only use it for road trips or towing, not daily driving.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0...?ie=UTF8&psc=1
#10
The LR2 has towing electrics integrated into the vehicle, but you have to buy an OEM harness for that. The one for the US is not made anymore but the one for the EU is still available. I bought that along with a tow bar, which installed very easily. Now I have a 13 pin EU connector, and I bought adapters to convert to US 4 or 7 pin. Best of all worlds, don't have to rewire my glider's trailer after I did that in Germany.