Fast Mopar wrote:
jerem0621 wrote:
I found something similar when we were shopping for our Van. All of the Town & Countries had the exact same payload sticker and number regardless of options at that dealership... when I had my Van serviced a few states away while on travel I found that the Town & Countries there had the same payload number...regardless of options.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
I agree with this. The payload on my low option Grand Caravan is listed as the same as the loaded Town & Country vans I have looked at, which makes absolutely no sense at all.
However, at the same time, I disagree with the "silly" reference when it comes to the tags. I work for a large American OEM tire manufacturer, and I can assure you that the load rating numbers stamped on your tires are not "silly" by any means.
Thanks for the feedback... I was referencing the payload sticker in the door jamb of vehicles as 'silly'...they do not reflect the max tire loading at all... go look on any new auto and compare the payload stickers tire load rating to the stamp on the sidewalls of the tires... for most half tons the sticker is figured at 36-40 PSI...as an example... air the tires up to max sidewall pressure and the sticker no longer reflects what the tires themselves can carry...same if you air the tires down... most P rated truck tires have a max PSI of 44-50 PSI nowadays.
It is my understanding that the payload sticker is figured with OEM tires on the factory floor at the stated PSI on the sticker...please correct me if I am wrong about this.
Add aftermarket bed covers, side steps, tool box, load range E tires, or big knobby tires and the payload sticker on the door jamb becomes irrelevant.
Every "how much can I tow" thread agrees with me that the payload sticker is silly... especially when the advice is given to go fill up your gas tank and go weigh the truck and subtract the scale weight from the GVWR to get your real payload... that advice is saying ignore the payload sticker and use a scale to verify real payload vs the real world.
Just so I am clear, I agree,the stamp ratings on the tire sidewalls are absolute DOT enforceable and NOT to be exceeded.
Thanks!
Jeremiah