Over the Thanksgiving weekend I saw a commercial on TV for the new Ford Superduty. There were chains on both tow hooks that were also attached to what looked like an upright concrete slab. The truck started backing up and the slab moved with it, contactin another slab and pulling it into another slab, which slid into yet another slab, etc. The caption read something around 19,000 lbs.
I've also read on this site that because of the way the frame is designed the tow hooks are there to pull the truck out of a ditch, but not for towing other vehicles. What gives? Did Ford design their frames differently, or are they scamming the potential buyer? One explanation might be that the load was balanced between both tow hooks, the truck was moving backward in a straight line and the load increased incrementally as each concrete slab contacted the next. And when the camera was turned off the truck may have been dead right there, for all I know.
Anyone know if Ford has something going in the tow hook department that Dodge doesn't have, or is this just an advertising trick?
I've also read on this site that because of the way the frame is designed the tow hooks are there to pull the truck out of a ditch, but not for towing other vehicles. What gives? Did Ford design their frames differently, or are they scamming the potential buyer? One explanation might be that the load was balanced between both tow hooks, the truck was moving backward in a straight line and the load increased incrementally as each concrete slab contacted the next. And when the camera was turned off the truck may have been dead right there, for all I know.
Anyone know if Ford has something going in the tow hook department that Dodge doesn't have, or is this just an advertising trick?