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So I know the towing limit is 4500 lbs, but curious if anyone knows if that changes with electric brakes on the trailer. I have a 2 horse bumper pull that weighs 2800 and one horse that weights 900. That puts me at 3700. The second horse which I have yet to put in there weights prolly 1100 putting me at 4800. But the trailer has electric brakes and I have a proportional brake control unit that was recommended to me from this site. I know with the tundras having electric brakes on the trailer changes the towing capacity so was wondering if it does on the fjs to?

I want to take both horses camping!

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I would ask a trailer company. Try these guys, they are big locally and I am sure they can answer your questions:

http://www.pacwesttrailers.com/  good luck.

Steve Hope.

As far as I know the tow ratings do not increase with electric brakes. In fact the owners manual says anything over 1,000 lbs towing requires supplemental trailer brakes.

Not sure if the tow limits changed from 2007 to 2008, but the 2008 limit is 5,000 lbs. I tow a 2,000 lb trailer with a cord of wood on it and would not want to pull much more than that weight wise. A cord of wood is around 3,500 lbs. So the weight was probably over the limit a bit. There were definitely a few times where I could feel the trailer wanting to push the FJ around. I would not be comfortable pulling any more than that.

Btw, the weight you can tow is decreased pound for pound for anything inside the FJ as well, including driver and passengers.

No way would I haul around a 5000' horse trailer with an FJC. Maybe for short distances, but not for a trip longer than 30 minutes.

Regardless of tongue weight, the rear springs are too soft, and you definitely don't want the trailer to outweigh the tow vehicle.

Good point. I should mention I have aftermarket, stiffer springs as well.

Thanks guys thats kinda what I thought. I guess if I want to tow 2 horses I either need to get a lighter trailer or make someone else do it!  Do you think with just the one horse so 3700 lbs I should be getting airbags or stiffer springs? I would be towing out about 1-2 times a month mostly all within 45 min. Maybe 2-3 times a year a longer distance.

Another thing about towing a horse trailer is that it's a dynamic load - horses move - not a lot, but still.

And if something happens with the trailer, it's not like like you dropped a cord of wood. It would be a tragedy.

Have you towed the trailer with your dad's Tundra? How does it work with that?

I have not towed it with his Tundra. He doesnt have the brake control unit .

Most I have done behind an FJ is 8,000 lbs. It was squirrelely, but no major issues. Longest I have towed is a 20' trailer. Both ways, 5,000 is fine :) 

Get a weight distribution hitch, brakes on both axles, and give er hell. :) 

Where did you guys hook up the purple backup wire to? I tried acessing the wire harness under the fj that goes to the back, matched the blue wire with white pin to the blue wire with white pin that goes to the reverse lights and used a quick connect but that did not do it. I figured there was a diff in wire gauge so that could be an issue, checked that there was indeed power to that cable and cut it to connect it but  The back up lights were still on in my truck  so clearly it was not that cable. How did others connect the purple wire from the harness kit?

The purple wire in my kit was not hooked to anything. It was labled as "auxillary lights" and I did not need it.

For mine it releases the brakes when in reverse so I can back up. But I need to find out what to hook it into

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