โMay-05-2017 09:06 AM
โMay-07-2017 08:57 AM
tinner12002 wrote:
Also, the 376 doesn't look very bike friendly to me as you would have to leave the bike outside in order to have access to the bed...not something I would want to do. Think about if your driving and want to pull over and rest...no bed unless you unload the bike. Get the unit with the bedroom in the front and power beds in the garage if you need extra sleeping space like the 399 or the 388M if you don't need the extra capacity.
โMay-07-2017 08:24 AM
fj12ryder wrote:tinner12002 wrote:I'll have to admit if the cost of two more tires was the only expense then I'd have to agree.
Triple axle everytime for me, spreads out the weight better and pulls easier in my opinion. I also prefer the extra carrying capacity provided by the triple axle vs tandem axle. Someones worried about the cost of 2 more tires....really... your spending 75-80K on an RV so don't be worried about the cost of two more tires!! If that's all that was concerning me with purchasing an RV as to whether I would have to purchase 4 or 6 tires down the road, then I think I would hang up my keys and stay in a bricks and sticks house, but that's just my opinion. Get the triple axle and have fun camping and spending that extra $500 in 5 years, you won't regret it!!
But I, for one, would love to have disk brakes but those are substantially more with a triple axle, and suspension improvements are also around 50 percent more. I installed the EZ Flex components and wet bolts which costs more for the triple axle. If you have your wheel bearings done rather than doing it yourself, higher cost for a triple axle. If you do it yourself, you looking at more time and work with a triple axle. Want to add a TPMS? Higher cost for a triple axle. And higher tolls if you happen to hit a toll road. And the friction of 6 tires rather than 4 means a hit to your mpg. Not a big deal unless you put several thousand miles a year on it.
So there really is more than just the cost of an extra set of tires involved.
โMay-07-2017 06:28 AM
tinner12002 wrote:I'll have to admit if the cost of two more tires was the only expense then I'd have to agree.
Triple axle everytime for me, spreads out the weight better and pulls easier in my opinion. I also prefer the extra carrying capacity provided by the triple axle vs tandem axle. Someones worried about the cost of 2 more tires....really... your spending 75-80K on an RV so don't be worried about the cost of two more tires!! If that's all that was concerning me with purchasing an RV as to whether I would have to purchase 4 or 6 tires down the road, then I think I would hang up my keys and stay in a bricks and sticks house, but that's just my opinion. Get the triple axle and have fun camping and spending that extra $500 in 5 years, you won't regret it!!
โMay-07-2017 05:03 AM
โMay-07-2017 04:40 AM
momentum rv wrote:
Just one example of a brand new 5ers.
2017 Grand Design 350m
GVWR
16500 lbs
Length**
38' 9"
Height
13' 5"
Axle Rating
2 x 7000
โMay-07-2017 04:32 AM
โMay-06-2017 06:57 PM
taken wrote:Could you please cite a reference to that law. I'm just wondering how Mobile Suites can make 5th wheels that have a GVWR of 19,000 lbs. and have two axles. So you're saying they are breaking the law?
By law the axle capacity needs to meet or exceed the GVWR of the RV. Yes, pin weight will prevent the full GVWR from ever being completely on the axles, but that's the way it is. (Some brands got burned and fined big time a few years back for not complying...) On mine, I have three 7k axles for my 21k GVWR. Dry weight on my RV was 16k so two 8k axles won't work or even come close to working.
โMay-06-2017 05:10 PM
โMay-06-2017 05:08 PM
โMay-06-2017 04:57 PM
โMay-06-2017 04:55 PM
taken wrote:
By law the axle capacity needs to meet or exceed the GVWR of the RV. Yes, pin weight will prevent the full GVWR from ever being completely on the axles, but that's the way it is. (Some brands got burned and fined big time a few years back for not complying...) On mine, I have three 7k axles for my 21k GVWR. Dry weight on my RV was 16k so two 8k axles won't work or even come close to working.
โMay-06-2017 04:53 PM
taken wrote:
By law the axle capacity needs to meet or exceed the GVWR of the RV. Yes, pin weight will prevent the full GVWR from ever being completely on the axles, but that's the way it is. (Some brands got burned and fined big time a few years back for not complying...) On mine, I have three 7k axles for my 21k GVWR. Dry weight on my RV was 16k so two 8k axles won't work or even come close to working.
โMay-06-2017 04:26 PM
โMay-06-2017 12:30 PM
Bumpyroad wrote:I agree with the "if you NEED the carrying capacity" thought. I just haven't figured out when that occurs. I got curious and looked at the weight of the Mobile Suite brand. Most of their larger 5th wheels' GVWR run around 20,000-22,000 lbs. and all of them are double axles. Their toyhaulers are triple axles but the GVWR of those is 24,000 lbs.fj12ryder wrote:
Ah, another reason to prefer duals over triples: higher tolls for that extra axle. Honestly I don't see the reason for a triple axle if the weight can be handled by two axles. You hardly see any heavy regular 5th wheels with triple axles anymore, most are two 8,000 lb. axles if they need the carrying capacity.
"Don't try and justify not doing it, extra axle helps in many ways." Please explain how an extra axle helps if two axles can carry the weight? I'm not referring to an over-40 foot trailer, just say, a 38 foot trailer.
I'm starting to get the same old feeling that ego enters in here, rather than necessity. Of course if you NEED the carrying capacity of 3 axles get them, if not why?
bumpy