Sort of the same idea as swinging a bat with a donut weight on it before
you go up to the plate....
-- Miles Harris IIIMALDBNSF@aol.com wrote in article <9f.13aa4d8e.27ff86ec@aol.com>... > I have found the same thing after towing or carry a load for a while. I > thinks it the computer as readjusted for the heavy load or the weight of the > trailer. This dose die down after awhile sorry to say. Hey whobout pulling a > heavy trailer to the race track! Hmmmm just a thought :p > > Don Mallett > '00 QC 4.7L Auto SLT, Rest of info at Geocities.com/maldbnsf > In a message dated 4/6/01 12:25:15 PM, clhyer@hom.net writes: > > << A strange thing happened to me last weekend. I took a load of furniture to > > Columbus, Ga. - about 75 miles. Towed a small utility trailer, overdrive > > off. On the way home I was able to maintain 60 mph in overdrive the whole > > way, except for two large hills. > > > The truck has never towed this trailer in OD before for any distance. Any > > theories? It pulled on the level and up smaller hills, I was amazed... > > > Some of you may remember that I've had it at the dealer because it wouldn't > > tow. Nothing was ever found wrong. The last time I towed to Columbus, > > before Christmas, it wouldn't tow it back in OD. This trailer can't weigh > > but 4-500 pounds. I maintain that it should handle this without even > > knowing it was back there, in or out of OD. > > > Cal Hyer > > '99 V-6 Auto 16,265 miles >> > > > >
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