Forum Discussion

texas8324's avatar
texas8324
Explorer
Jun 15, 2015

new to forum with a few questions -Ram 1500

I have a 2014 Ram 1500 Laramie Hemi with 3.92 gears. Will be getting a Center Line WDH. By my calculations, before adding hitch, i would have around 515lbs for hitch weight (if driver counts toward payload) and 665 (if driver doesn't). Do you think I should be fine with either of these travel trailers:


Outback Terrain 210TRS
Shipping Weight 4710
Carrying Capacity 2290
Hitch 510

Passport Grand Touring 2400BH
Shipping Weight 4685
Carrying Capacity 1815
Hitch 555

Thanks so much for your time.
kevin
  • Fastfwd75 wrote:
    How can you have only 500-600 for hitch weight? Are you carrying something heavy in the bed? You will see a lot of people overweight from pulling 5er on a 4 door 150/1500 truck. Usually you would think that most bumper pulls would be fine for a recent truck.

    The payload on even a too well equipped(crew,4x4,etc.) F150 would be 1500lbs+; probably similar for Dodge.

    Hitch is limited to 500lbs without WDH but a lot more than that with. Both trailers are 6500lbs max fully loaded with 10-15% going to the hitch so at worse ~1000lbs. You will want a weight distributing hitch but it should be OK if there is nothing else in the trucks bed and not too many heavy people in it.


    You would be surprised at how little payload a Ram 1500 can have if well optioned. 1500 lbs might be the upper limit if you're lucky while I've seen as little as around 850 lbs on Hemi and diesel models that were loaded with all the goodies.
  • Take a look at the driver side post there is a yellow and white sticker with the specs load of your truck.
    You will see the Payload limits and it states "The combine weight of occupants and cargo should never exceed XXXX lbs" So, you have to know the weight of occupants and cargo and subtract that from the XXXX lbs and that is what you have left for you TW.
  • Welcome !!! ...to the world of RV'ing

    Simple math to figure, but complex because of the multiple components
    and their weights/ratings

    As a bare minimum, you need to gather the OEM ratings and the biggie
    actual weights AFTER they are fully loaded ready to go RV'ing

    Know you do not have the trailer yet, so you decide or guesstimate what
    it will actually be. Otherwise, use their maximum ratings weight provided
    by the OEM (GVWR)

    Need to gather:

    • TV GVWR
    • TV front GAWR
    • TV rear GAWR
    • TV GCWR
    • TV receiver ratings
    • Trailer GVWR
    • Trailer GAWR
    • Trailer Percentage tongue or it's actual


    Then plug those numbers into the generic formula for the TV's ratings:

    GCWR => TV + trailer + everything else



    Everything else will be people, pets, ice chest, fire wood, bicycles,
    lawn chairs, etc, etc, etc and the WD Hitch system

    Here is a visual of how the various weights stack up and the RATINGs
    system looks like

    howmuchcanitow howmuchshoulditow
  • How can you have only 500-600 for hitch weight? Are you carrying something heavy in the bed? You will see a lot of people overweight from pulling 5er on a 4 door 150/1500 truck. Usually you would think that most bumper pulls would be fine for a recent truck.

    The payload on even a too well equipped(crew,4x4,etc.) F150 would be 1500lbs+; probably similar for Dodge.

    Hitch is limited to 500lbs without WDH but a lot more than that with. Both trailers are 6500lbs max fully loaded with 10-15% going to the hitch so at worse ~1000lbs. You will want a weight distributing hitch but it should be OK if there is nothing else in the trucks bed and not too many heavy people in it.
  • You need at least 10% hitch weight of the trailers total weight to have a stable pull, many find 13% to be better. 15% is considered to be the upper limit of what you would want.

    Both of these are 11-12% from the factory with nothing in them. If you load them and try to keep the tongue weight at least 12% and load only 1000 lbs into them you would have the following.

    Outback, 4710+1000=5710, 5710 x .12 = 685 lbs of tongue weight

    Passport, 4685+1000=5685, 5685 x .12 = 682 lbs of tongue weight

    I think at the bare minimum, you will be over your payload limit by a little. I don't think the driver counts on the payload sticker, I think they generally only count the driver for the trailer limits.

    Honestly, both of my trailers ended up in the 15-17% tongue weight range due to trailer design and because we tend to load a lot in. Since these trailers start out dry with lower % of tongue weight, maybe they will stay at a lower % as you load them. Depends on where the water tanks are, and storage is relative to the trailer axle.
  • first of all I see you are a new member - Welcome!

    Now, to your questions:-
    Max Payload rating does NOT include the driver.
    Max Tow rating does.
    Are you confused yet??

    The bad news is that both those trailers will put you at or slightly over your 515# max when they are empty!!
    Add battery, propane, water and personal stuff and you probably be at least 200 - 300# over I'm afraid.
    Did you allow 100# for the Weight Distributing hitch (WDH)? I suspect your hitch will be rated for 500# dead-weight and requires WDH beyond that. If not, add another 100# to the above numbers.

    Not the end of the world, but pushing your truck into any "cushion" RAM may have built in.

About RV Tips & Tricks

Looking for advice before your next adventure? Look no further.25,108 PostsLatest Activity: Feb 01, 2025