Feb-11-2015 03:32 PM
Feb-17-2015 04:56 PM
Feb-17-2015 04:27 PM
Feb-17-2015 12:05 PM
Feb-16-2015 06:16 PM
Feb-13-2015 04:49 PM
NC Hauler wrote:Coach-man wrote:
Hi, I am sure you will love the upgrade to a 5th wheel. Towing, Weights, and all the alphabet soup of ratings, can get very confusing! You wanted opinions? Here is mine, first about 20% of the weight of your 5th wheel will be in the bed of your truck, add to that the 200 or so lbs. For your hitch, then add for you and your passengers, and anything else you put in your truck. Add that up and check to see how that stacks up against your payload capacity. Oh, and did I add that the advertised weight of the 5th wheel does not include the propane, food, clothes, and other things you may want to take along with you? You could add air bags, or helper springs, but that does not fix, axle, wheel, or brake issues.
Now, that I stated all that, I have a 2500, added a helper spring and changed tire and wheels, and I pull a 35' fifth wheel. Is my TV at capacity, yes it is, I will change to a 3500 dually at some point. I beleive you also own a Ram? Dodge boys do not have the money other makers have, so the engine, tranny, and frame are the same on the 2500 and 3500 models. If you have the 11.5" rear end, then tires and wheels will be your area of concern. Also I think you should be looking at some lighter 5th wheels to get you into the ballpark. BTW, my GD Solitude weighed in at 11,300 lbs according to the sticker, so your rig should weigh around the same. Good luck!
..."Dodge boys do not have the money other makers have, so the engine, tranny and frame are the same on the 2500 and 3500 models"
Wow, great dig:R...The 2500 has the same highly rated tensile strength frame, but rear ends can be different...The 3500 also offers the Aisin Transmission...so evidently Ram had enough money to upgrade the transmission in the 3500....The 2500 can come with a 68RFE 6 speed automatic OR a manual transmission, (GM nor Ford offers this....guess Ram has enough money to offer an auto or a manual on the 2500's as well as the 3500's, except with the 3500, you can go manual, 68RFE 6-speed automatic or the medium duty tranny Aisin 6 speed...so you can get THREE different trannys with the 3500 SRW and 2 different one's with the 2500....The 3500 dually offers an 11.8 rear end, three different tranny's and 3 different gearing options...son, Ram must be plum broke after all that...
Nice dig on Ram though.... it didn't go un-noticed:) I didn't notice what truck you have, but will guess it isn't a Dodge/Ram:)
Rest had been covered already with 20% of the GVW, etc.
Feb-12-2015 12:58 PM
Feb-12-2015 12:15 PM
Feb-12-2015 10:41 AM
Feb-12-2015 09:17 AM
Feb-12-2015 07:09 AM
Coach-man wrote:
Hi, I am sure you will love the upgrade to a 5th wheel. Towing, Weights, and all the alphabet soup of ratings, can get very confusing! You wanted opinions? Here is mine, first about 20% of the weight of your 5th wheel will be in the bed of your truck, add to that the 200 or so lbs. For your hitch, then add for you and your passengers, and anything else you put in your truck. Add that up and check to see how that stacks up against your payload capacity. Oh, and did I add that the advertised weight of the 5th wheel does not include the propane, food, clothes, and other things you may want to take along with you? You could add air bags, or helper springs, but that does not fix, axle, wheel, or brake issues.
Now, that I stated all that, I have a 2500, added a helper spring and changed tire and wheels, and I pull a 35' fifth wheel. Is my TV at capacity, yes it is, I will change to a 3500 dually at some point. I beleive you also own a Ram? Dodge boys do not have the money other makers have, so the engine, tranny, and frame are the same on the 2500 and 3500 models. If you have the 11.5" rear end, then tires and wheels will be your area of concern. Also I think you should be looking at some lighter 5th wheels to get you into the ballpark. BTW, my GD Solitude weighed in at 11,300 lbs according to the sticker, so your rig should weigh around the same. Good luck!
Feb-12-2015 06:55 AM
Feb-12-2015 06:47 AM
SkiSmuggs wrote:cruz-in wrote:
We have a 2WD Crew Cab F250 with a payload rating of only around 2300 pounds. We had very few 5th wheel to chose from, that is if we wanted to stay within the trucks payload rating. I decided we need a dry in weight of 1300 pounds or less, and pack light, if we wanted to stay within trucks payload rating.
Ended up with a 28 foot 5th wheel. When we decided to go bigger, if we wanted to stay within trucks specs, our only options were TTs. We currently have a 37 foot TT.
Having said that, we are at an RV psrk in Tucson for the winter. It just amazes me what people tow with 250/2500 trucks. Some of the biggest 5th wheels in the park are towed with 250/2500 trucks.
I tow a 34' with a pin weight loaded of 1650 lbs. The rated payload is 1848. I am 500-600 lbs over, and sticker aside, used SuperSprings and Bilstein HD shocks to help out. In over 12,000 miles of towing, I never felt overloaded and with the HD payload package that became available the following model year, I would have been within specs. My dry pin weight was 1410 lbs. Some just like more reserve than others. That said, I have an F350 on order because I know the next fiver will be heavier.
The OP needs to know his payload and add about 300 lbs to the dry pin weight to help choose his fiver. I am going from an F150 to the F350 because the payload of the F250 is about the same as the F150 HD Payload
Feb-12-2015 06:34 AM
Feb-12-2015 05:57 AM
cruz-in wrote:
We have a 2WD Crew Cab F250 with a payload rating of only around 2300 pounds. We had very few 5th wheel to chose from, that is if we wanted to stay within the trucks payload rating. I decided we need a dry in weight of 1300 pounds or less, and pack light, if we wanted to stay within trucks payload rating.
Ended up with a 28 foot 5th wheel. When we decided to go bigger, if we wanted to stay within trucks specs, our only options were TTs. We currently have a 37 foot TT.
Having said that, we are at an RV psrk in Tucson for the winter. It just amazes me what people tow with 250/2500 trucks. Some of the biggest 5th wheels in the park are towed with 250/2500 trucks.