Extreme Terrain
4x4Wire Trail Talk Forums: Jeep, Toyota, Mitsubishi, Pajero, Isuzu, Kia, 4WD, 4x4, SUV, Off-Road and OutdoorWire Forums


Previous Thread
Next Thread
Print Thread
Rate Thread
Towing with an Amigo #819866 06/19/07 05:15 AM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 279
FSJ1978 Offline OP
Mudrunner
My Wife and I are looking to buy a travel trailer to take on 4x4 weekends and shortish vacations. We're planning on using our 91 Amigo to pull it, and we're looking at trailers that weight 3,000lbs or less (loaded, ready to roll). I would like to see what other Isuzu people think of my upping the tow rating on our 91 Amigo. Here's how 1st gen Vs. 2nd gen shapes up:

(I don't know why the 'code' tag is showing up, but at least the table is readable now)

Code
                    1991 Amigo     Modified Amigo    2000 Amigo 
Horse power    120 @ 4600       200 @ 5200      205 @ 5400 
 Torque          146 @ 2600       225 @ 4000      214 @ 3000 
 Wheelbase          91.7                95-96              96.9" 
 Vehicle weight     3615               3700                3908
 Tow rating         2000             ????????              4500  


Is the frame of the 2nd gen stronger? I can upgrade our rear brakes, and will be putting in a different front axle, probably a D44 so we'll have better brakes than stock. We're also on 35" tires with a rear SOA. I can also install air bags if necessary to help out the springs (The bumper I put on is around #80 by itself).

I know it towed our current trailer, around 1,800lbs with the 4cyl, and 35s without any problems (other than power). No sway, and no braking problems (electric trailer brakes). Thoughts, other than "Stick to the stock 2K limit and be safe", would be welcomed and apreciated.

Last edited by FSJ1978; 06/19/07 04:37 PM.
Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: FSJ1978] #819867 06/19/07 05:30 AM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 2,652
W
Wayne Offline
Roll Me Over
Most I tow with my 93 Amigo is a grill, or a small trailer with a motorcycle.

Hey, I lived in Texas for 10 years and still go back about 14 times a year. It's a big grill. It's been used at local restaurants. (Funny....I'd get free dinner but they didn't want the Amigo parked in a prominent place out front....)

I just think power would be your biggest issue, dragging on the engine.


[color:"white"]? 04 Rodeo DI ?[/color] 75k mi, body damage on the 1st weekend I got it.
Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: Wayne] #819868 06/19/07 06:09 AM
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 2,437
lttlbddy Offline
Body Damage is Cool
The table is hard to read but the Amigo will be modified with a 200 hp V6 (I believe); so the power is not the concern.

Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: FSJ1978] #819869 06/19/07 08:21 AM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 2,652
W
Wayne Offline
Roll Me Over
I didn't catch the part where you were doing an engine swap with a 2001, I thought you were just comparing.

I think the 'code' command uses equal space letters and retains spacing, much like Courier font.

I can't even begin to speak for how strong frames are by ear, but Isuzu always built stout.


[color:"white"]? 04 Rodeo DI ?[/color] 75k mi, body damage on the 1st weekend I got it.
Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: Wayne] #819870 06/19/07 12:12 PM
Joined: Dec 1999
Posts: 1,214
J
Jeff Mason Offline
Body Damage is Cool
I've towed a pop-up trailer with our 99 amigo quite a bit, usually in the colorado mountains. It weighs in, fully loaded, under 2000 pounds (probably closer to 1800). The amigo pulls it well on gentle terrain and 'easy' hills, but does bog down on the steeper hills.

I have also towed our samurai from Denver to Moab and back on two occasions. The sammi probably weighs in at around 2200 pounds (loaded) and the dolly weighs 200 or so.

With that amount of weight, and three passengers in the Amigo, the uphill climbs are much more of a struggle. 35 - 40 mph on the way to the Eisenhower Tunnel, that or a litle less on Vail Pass (Eastbound, especially). The engine works very hard for the 10 - 15 mile stretches that are the steepest, and also works hard on some of the smaller steep hills along the way.

I cannot imagine towing much more weight with my sammi (at least at 10,000 - 11,000 feet in the Rockies). If you are going to be predominantly on 'flat land' you might have better results.


Jeff Mason

Whatever makes you upset in someone else...also exists in you
Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: Jeff Mason] #819871 06/19/07 03:16 PM
Joined: Sep 2000
Posts: 4,277
RobG Offline
Roll Me Over
I'd make electric trailer brakes and a load distributing hitch requirements, and then you could probably get away with this in relative safety. I wouldn't go a penny over 3k lbs though, so make sure you're right on the weigh and factor in all your gear, passengers, and fuel too.


-Rob

Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: Wayne] #819872 06/19/07 03:25 PM
Joined: Jan 2000
Posts: 2,437
lttlbddy Offline
Body Damage is Cool
Quote
I didn't catch the part where you were doing an engine swap with a 2001, I thought you were just comparing.


Actually it is the 1991 that is getting a 3.8 Camaro motor:

Amigo Motor Swap

I believe that the 2000 is there just for comparison. Last I knew Chris did not have a late model.

With the live axle front swap, a little extended wheelbase can only help the towing of the Amigo as well.

Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: lttlbddy] #819873 06/19/07 04:41 PM
Joined: Jan 2003
Posts: 279
FSJ1978 Offline OP
Mudrunner
Steve's got it nailed. I'm going to wind up with a 91 Amigo, a Camaro 3.8L motor(200ft/lb of torque from about 1500rpm on up), and a solid front axle moved forward 3-6" (Not sure how much, as that's a future project). The stock 91 and the 2000 Amigo specs, are indeed, only there for comparison purposes.

It edited the original post using the 'code' command (Thanks Wayne) so the comparison chart is more ledgable.

Thanks for the input so far...


Chris Enos (Chino, CA)

'91 Isuzu Amigo "Rover" (Camaro 3800 swap in progress / 2.25" exhaust)
....(SOA / Custom rear bumper / CB / HAM)
Re: Towing with an Amigo [Re: FSJ1978] #819874 06/24/07 11:02 PM
Joined: Aug 2000
Posts: 474
muskyamigo Offline
Mudrunner
Honestly a 1st gen Amigo with SAS isn't something I would want to tow much with. Between the height, over size tires, relatively short wheelbase (anything under 100" is short). I'm not looking at it from the power perspective, you'll have plenty. I also believe the drive train will be up to it. I would mostly be concerned with the suspension and weight of the trailer causing a bit of an issue.

Not to say it won't work "good enough"

FWIW, I used to tow a 1700 lb boat behind both my stock 1st gen and my lifted 2nd gen (stock gears and 33's) without a problem.

-Mike


Mike Walter
'98 Amigo well used
'94 Rodeo in need of help
'99 Ram CTD for hauling feather pillows
'01 unheated shop







4x4Wire Social:

| 4x4Wire on FaceBook |


OutdoorWire, 4x4Wire, JeepWire, TrailTalk, MUIRNet-News, and 4x4Voice are all trademarks and publications of OutdoorWire, Inc. and MUIRNet Consulting.
Copyright (c) 1999-2019 OutdoorWire, Inc and MUIRNet Consulting - All Rights Reserved, no part of this publication may be reproduced in any form without express written permission
You may link freely to this site, but no further use is allowed without the express written permission of the owner of this material.
All corporate trademarks are the property of their respective owners.

Powered by UBB.threads™ PHP Forum Software 7.7.3
(Release build 20190728)
PHP: 7.4.33 Page Time: 0.007s Queries: 15 (0.004s) Memory: 0.6284 MB (Peak: 0.7357 MB) Data Comp: Off Server Time: 2026-05-25 15:49:22 UTC
Valid HTML 5 and Valid CSS