โMar-03-2021 05:13 PM
โMar-07-2021 07:53 AM
โMar-07-2021 06:55 AM
rhagfo wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:Michelle.S wrote:
Everyone always says Duallys are no good in snow. When I was still working, my Dually was my "Go To Vehicle" during snow storms. Now I did have approx 700 or 800 pounds of sand bags in the box all behind the axles. I traveled 50 miles one way to work in Rochester, NY with Lake Effect from Lake Ontario. If roads were real bad, slow down and put it into 4 wheel high and motor on passing all the little 4x4 SUVs in the medium.
My friend in NW WA has a 13 RAM DRW he uses for his Landscaping Business. I asked him how his truck did in the snow this winter.
"It handled awesome with 30psi in the rear tires doing my snow melt and sidewalk shoveling maintenance."
It is those that run their DRW tires at 80 psi, because that is what is on the sidewall!
โMar-06-2021 05:19 PM
โMar-06-2021 06:07 AM
ACZL wrote:
I know this is getting off topic for OP, but I have 1400# of tube sand over axle, 60 psi in stock tires. Guess I could lower them more, but now that winter is winding down, no need to.
โMar-06-2021 04:13 AM
โMar-05-2021 02:57 PM
rhagfo wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:Michelle.S wrote:
Everyone always says Duallys are no good in snow. When I was still working, my Dually was my "Go To Vehicle" during snow storms. Now I did have approx 700 or 800 pounds of sand bags in the box all behind the axles. I traveled 50 miles one way to work in Rochester, NY with Lake Effect from Lake Ontario. If roads were real bad, slow down and put it into 4 wheel high and motor on passing all the little 4x4 SUVs in the medium.
My friend in NW WA has a 13 RAM DRW he uses for his Landscaping Business. I asked him how his truck did in the snow this winter.
"It handled awesome with 30psi in the rear tires doing my snow melt and sidewalk shoveling maintenance."
It is those that run their DRW tires at 80 psi, because that is what is on the sidewall!
โMar-05-2021 10:54 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:Michelle.S wrote:
Everyone always says Duallys are no good in snow. When I was still working, my Dually was my "Go To Vehicle" during snow storms. Now I did have approx 700 or 800 pounds of sand bags in the box all behind the axles. I traveled 50 miles one way to work in Rochester, NY with Lake Effect from Lake Ontario. If roads were real bad, slow down and put it into 4 wheel high and motor on passing all the little 4x4 SUVs in the medium.
My friend in NW WA has a 13 RAM DRW he uses for his Landscaping Business. I asked him how his truck did in the snow this winter.
"It handled awesome with 30psi in the rear tires doing my snow melt and sidewalk shoveling maintenance."
โMar-05-2021 08:11 AM
Michelle.S wrote:
Everyone always says Duallys are no good in snow. When I was still working, my Dually was my "Go To Vehicle" during snow storms. Now I did have approx 700 or 800 pounds of sand bags in the box all behind the axles. I traveled 50 miles one way to work in Rochester, NY with Lake Effect from Lake Ontario. If roads were real bad, slow down and put it into 4 wheel high and motor on passing all the little 4x4 SUVs in the medium.
โMar-05-2021 07:26 AM
โMar-05-2021 07:06 AM
โMar-05-2021 06:22 AM
MFL wrote:ACZL wrote:
IMO it's a no go. Truck should weigh in around 8600# +/-. Going by replies from others, the RV's dry weight is 14k and max of 16k. You will be at max capacity all the way around if not over on some. I had same truck, but when we upgraded RV's we were in same situation as you. Yes truck towed it fine and I loved the truck, but didn't like being right at max on everything. Dry weight of new coach was 14k and max was 16k. Fully loaded, pin was 3700, RV 16,000, total weight on truck 12,300, combo 24,600. Ended up getting a DRW 350 and night/day diff in towing. Yes the DRW sux in the snow, but for towing north of 15k max RV weight, you are in DRW territory.
Dry wt is just 12K with a large CCC, loaded GW likely 14-14.5K, kind of reason OP said the numbers fit.
Jerry
โMar-04-2021 06:45 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
" If I recall the GVWR was 16,000. That makes for a 3200 pound pin."
So based on your formula I should have 4,200# pin since my GVWR is 21k. But why is my pin 6,000?
My RV actually weighs 24k and my pin percentage is 25%. So just because a number says XYZ that doesn't make it so!!!
โMar-04-2021 05:19 PM
โMar-04-2021 06:23 AM