โMay-14-2018 11:38 AM
โMay-21-2018 05:14 AM
donn0128 wrote:My 3500 SRW has a payload of 4300+#.It's a loaded 2wd CC LB.
You need a dually!
The advertised "dry" pin weight which you posted is a myth. Pin weight will be approx 20% of its loaded ready to travel weight. Lacking a loaded ready to travel weight use the trailers GVWR. You already said it has a 16,600 GVWR, so 20% of that is well over 3300 pounds. It could top out at 4000 pounds easily. With a SRW truck you will likely exceed tire load rating, rear axle load rating, and a whole bunch more.
Long bed, short bed? That debate will go on for ever. Personally I have no use for a shprt bed. The loss of two feet of bed space is just too much for me to give up.
โMay-21-2018 05:05 AM
โMay-20-2018 11:53 PM
โMay-20-2018 08:19 PM
Wild Card wrote:
Other than weight...that may just be inside a SRW specs. Lets add a 40ft x 13'6" sail at 17000#. If your only pulling it 200 miles a few times a year on near flat ground dont worry. Pull it 10, 15000 mileds a year in the mountains you might re concider
โMay-20-2018 07:48 PM
โMay-20-2018 07:05 PM
โMay-20-2018 06:36 PM
โMay-20-2018 04:04 PM
ford truck guy wrote:Me Again wrote:blofgren wrote:
Anyone else notice that pretty much everyone who is recommending a SRW are ones that really should have a DRW themselves??
Which posters would that be? Chris
^^ you.... me.... ... Just a guess ??:h
โMay-20-2018 02:06 PM
Me Again wrote:blofgren wrote:
Anyone else notice that pretty much everyone who is recommending a SRW are ones that really should have a DRW themselves??
Which posters would that be? Chris
โMay-19-2018 09:37 PM
blofgren wrote:
Anyone else notice that pretty much everyone who is recommending a SRW are ones that really should have a DRW themselves??
โMay-19-2018 09:26 PM
larry barnhart wrote:Campinghoss@51 wrote:Wild Card wrote:nayther wrote:
Those that live "in the country" or don't use their truck for a daily driver always sit back and harp on DW long bed trucks. They are virtually undriveable in a big city. We live in suburban L.A. and I would NEVER attempt to drive a dually long bed in downtown
I drive my long bed dually in the city all the time. Really not a big deal.
You should attempt it
Agree. I drive mine in Chesapeake and Norfolk traffic whenever I want too.
As far as the newer models having higher towing capacity I agree. However the towing capacity has nothing to do with the stability of a drw vs a srw regardless of towing capacity.
I feel this way as you do. Nothing better than a fat rear end.
chevman
โMay-19-2018 11:23 AM
nayther wrote:
Those that live "in the country" or don't use their truck for a daily driver always sit back and harp on DW long bed trucks. They are virtually undriveable in a big city. We live in suburban L.A. and I would NEVER attempt to drive a dually long bed in downtown
โMay-19-2018 11:15 AM
โMay-18-2018 07:15 PM
โMay-18-2018 06:15 PM
Campinghoss@51 wrote:Wild Card wrote:nayther wrote:
Those that live "in the country" or don't use their truck for a daily driver always sit back and harp on DW long bed trucks. They are virtually undriveable in a big city. We live in suburban L.A. and I would NEVER attempt to drive a dually long bed in downtown
I drive my long bed dually in the city all the time. Really not a big deal.
You should attempt it
Agree. I drive mine in Chesapeake and Norfolk traffic whenever I want too.
As far as the newer models having higher towing capacity I agree. However the towing capacity has nothing to do with the stability of a drw vs a srw regardless of towing capacity.