Dear Dan, Keith, and mid-60s Buick owner dreaming of road-trip with style,
I see a lot of goofy characters on the road these days pulling 8,000 lb campers with 3500 lb vehicles,so maybe in 1965 the engineers had more sense when they rated the towing capacity....lol.
I think everyone, including drivers, had a better sense of what was realistic back in the mid-60s. Most families did at least some maintenance on their cars, so they were familiar with how they worked. It isn't like today when people are clueless about how car's actually work. Under those circumstances, all they could do is accept the manufacturer's recommendation if they even bothered to look!
Also, trailers were lighter than they are today. Today's Airstream models are heavier than models of the same length built back in 1965. Back in the day, SUVs weren't a dime a dozen and Airstream had to have trailers that could be pulled behind the family sedan or wagon.
Most of the crazy stuff I see pertains more to the ability to stop because we all know the Buick will go as good as anything. It would look pretty cool with a skylark on an aluminum trailer behind it or a 60's airstream.
Well I'm trying to get my Buick Special to pull a vintage Airstream or comparable trailer. If fact there was an awful tempting Streamline Princess trailer that was eBay recently:
https://www.ebay.com/itm/1968-STREAMLINE-PRINCESS-Compact-Well-Preserved-and-READY-TO-CAMP/282942476940There is even a walk around video for the curious:
https://youtu.be/_e8-NKeluEcIt looks like this trailer sold locally, it was really a great buy.
According to the 1965 Buick towing guide, only the Sportwagon could handle a class III load, but I think that's smoke and mirrors since the Sportwagon had the same drive train as the Skylark and Special. If you went with the same rear end ratio that was recommended for the Sportwagon, any Buick A-Body should have been fine.
However, to really succeed at towing this heavy a consist, some serious upgrades are highly desirable. That's why I have been working hard to make my trusty wagon a good deal more capable than a stock Buick A-Body.
Cheers, Edouard
