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Grodyman's avatar
Grodyman
Explorer
Oct 18, 2015

Ideas to Shed Weight in Truck Camper

I am looking at ways to shed some weight on my Lance 830. One area I'm looking at is the stock queen innerspring mattress. I'm not sure of the weight, maybe around 75lbs. plus I have a pretty heavy 2" memory foam topper as well.

I am looking at replacing the factory mattress with a 4" firm foam mattress with cover and placing the memory topper on top of that, or ditching the heavy memory foam for standard light egg crate foam topper. I think I can save 40-50lbs or more for not much cost/loss of comfort.

Worthwhile or spitting in the wind?

Gman

30 Replies

  • I'm trying not to have to buy 18" wheels/tires to gain 800+ lbs. of tire load rating. I just put new 17" rubber on. May be unavoidable to be "within spec"

    Gman
  • I guess the real question is what are you trying to accomplish? Axle weight or handling? Summer 2014 we took our 2009 830 to Alaska on a 2002 2500 ram, about 13,000 total miles. About 2 weeks before departure we loaded up and weighed. We went to 3 local recycling yards(all of which were state certified). They varied by 300 lbs. Next went to a cat scale which agreed with the middle scale. Point being, if weight is the concern be sure it is accurate. The results showed that we were about 200 lbs over on the rear tires. Those tires were rated at about 6800 lbs total. Obviously this was a concern. We were well under on front axle rating, over on gvwr, and over on rear axle rating. We were under on the Dana axle rating. The truck handled the load well but we were concerned. We decided to lower our weight, we removed some items and changed some items. We weighed everything. We decided not to take the front loaded bikes and moved the spare from underneath to the front. Our spare weighed 90 lbs. this meant not taking 2 spares, but oh well. The difference was greater than the 90 lbs fore and aft. We removed the mattress and took an air mattress. The mattress we had weighed about 50 lbs, the air mattress weighed about 10 lbs, so did the next 2 air mattresses. They were comfortable but none kept their proper air tension more than 3 days. We also had a lightweight egg grate topper which we kept. I know some love their air mattresses but I will not have another. We removed the shower door ( which I hated) and put it a curtain. As has been suggested we carried less water which saved us about 80 lbs. that all depends on where you are going and with how many folks. We made other changes but it is hard to lose weight??. Keep in mind any changes you make in handling add weight, some more, some less. At the end of the day we dropped about 300 lbs.. Sorry for the long post but we spent 2 weeks dealing with your exact question. Chris
  • edbehnke wrote:
    if you only have 10 gallons of water and not the full 30 gallons you save OVER 160 pounds, not 80 pounds as mentioned eariler.

    figure a gallon of water weights nearly 8 1/2 pounds.

    DOH!! You're right, and I'm embarrassed my math was so off. Yes 20 gallons would save 160+ lbs.
  • if you only have 10 gallons of water and not the full 30 gallons you save OVER 160 pounds, not 80 pounds as mentioned eariler.

    figure a gallon of water weights nearly 8 1/2 pounds.
  • I don't think 40-50 lbs is worth it, but more importantly, if you can't sleep great in the TC, then what is the point of having it! Carry less fuel, less stuff, or less water and keep your tanks dumped. I remember TCM did an attempt years ago to "lighten" their load including truck changes, but I think they probably only saved about 200 lbs with a lot of changes. I can save 200 lbs by just carrying less water! I don't worry about it anymore with my F450.

    If you are trying to make the truck ride better, look into mods for that. I doubt you are that unsafe for the truck capability although you are probably over GVWR.
  • > Ideas to Shed Weight in Truck Camper?
    Have you tried running in place?
    Maybe that hot yoga?

    How about cutting back on the bacon?

    Good luck.
  • One easy way to lower weight is to travel with minimal water in the tanks. I believe the 830 has a 30 gallon fresh tank. If you hit the road with only 10 gallons you've saved 80 lbs right there.
  • I agree...don't try and save weight on the mattress. Buy the most comfortable one you can for you, and don't worry about weight. A good night sleep is good for your health. :)
  • Not knowing whether your rig is overweight by a lot or a little its hard to say if 40/50 lbs will make any difference in the big picture. Are you carrying any stuff that you really dont need or use that would be better off left home and have a more significant impact on weight? After several trips we have found a few things that we just dont need. My rig is underweight but maybe additional suspension/truck mods would make your rig feel less 'heavy'?
  • I don't have a TC but, weight reduction is the sane for all RV's.
    Carry less stuff and replace stuff with lighter stuff.

    Before you change the mattress, make sure it will be comfortable. Saving 50 lbs is not worth sleeping on a miserable mattress.

    And, if you reduce the total weight by 200-300 lbs, will it be worth the effort and expense?