A friend of mine recently took his towcar to a garage with a clutch judder, the car was 2 years old and under manufacturers 3 year warranty, the technician soon located the problem, a replacement DMF was required, BUT... as soon as the workshops spotted the towbar and CC flag sticker on the back window blame was instantly pointed towards the caravan as the cause and the warranty claim called into question. After a long conversation in the managers office the cars powerplant was removed and was fitted with a new DMF under warranty, he was told however that they would not be replacing it again under warranty as the caravan was putting extra strain on the transmission train and stressing the DMF I have noticed recently that car warranty companies and other 3rd parties are reporting huge numbers of DMF failures, Toyota had a big prob with their Rav 4s up till 2004 and now I've found out through the trade that the Citroen Crosser (which has a Mitsubishi sistership) has a big problem with it as the 1st and 2nd gears are not low geared enough to pull a caravan from standing without having to excessively slip the clutch, a problem recently highlighted by the Daily Telegraph car website (Honest John). A host of other manufacturers are all reporting DMF failures. and the car manufacturers and other 3rd parties seem to be laying the blame at off-roading and the towing of caravans as a major contributor to this problem, towing heavy or wind resisting caravans and/or heavy use of the clutch damages these flywheels and the problem is'nt restricted to 2 wheel drives so...should we be buying towcars with DMF's?, should we steer clear of them?,Would it not be better to tow with Automatic gearboxes with an additional trans oil cooler. As most cars are now fitted with DMFs, whats your opinion folks ?