Jun-12-2013 11:21 AM
Jun-15-2013 09:34 AM
Jun-15-2013 09:30 AM
gpshemi wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
I will ask again what is your rear TV axle weight?
I can answer that, but honestly why would I? So you can continue to banter?
You've already decided that I'm overloaded, unsafe, hard headed, an uneducated gun toting redneck terrorist that's a complete danger to society...or something to that degree. I see this setup all the time in Michigan. So just as a forwarning to you, stay in another state or fear for your life I guess.
Additionally, I've already stated your mileage will vary from mine. It is what it is. He asked. I told. So what's the point? I'm not bantering with the weight police. Call me or it what you wish. I hate to break everyones heart, but I just don't really care much What you personally think. It works fine in every case I've used it in.
Do you want me to conceed that a DRW might perform better as a tow rig with additional safety margin? Is that what you're looking for? Done. I totally agree. I'd also add, so would a class 8 with twin rear DRW's over a 3500 DRW We just draw our lines different is all.
Jun-15-2013 07:41 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
I will ask again what is your rear TV axle weight?
Jun-15-2013 06:00 AM
Jun-15-2013 05:44 AM
Jun-14-2013 11:56 PM
gpshemi wrote:
I never said it was for everyone. Comfort level is a subjective thing. I said it works for me just fine and YMMV. I stick to that.
The ratings are just number on a door made between engineers and bean counters analyzed for warranty claims. It has less to do with "safety" than you realize. I'm an engineer there...I've seen this stuff first hand. That how you explain the increase in payloads and GCWR's year to year with basically the same truck.
Jun-14-2013 11:55 PM
jerem0621 wrote:
Folks,
I think we are getting lost a bit here by DRW vs SRW... What it really comes down to is this..
Is the truck appropriate for the job at hand?
If the answer is YES then it doesn't matter if its SWR or DWR.
SWR encompasses a LOT of vehicles... From S10's to SRW 3500 series trucks.
If you are pulling with an older truck similar to mine you had to get a dually to get the payload rating up to the 3000-4500 lb rating... now we are seeing 2500's in the 3000 lb payload range and 3500 in the 3000 plus range.
The questions that has to be asked is can the truck safely and comfortably handle the load YOU intend to put on it? If the answer is yes then get what you want. If not, then you need to move up a class of trucks to get the rating you NEED...
Me personally, I love the dually for towing. I have towed with SRW and feel that it gives me superior handling of the load. I don't think that anyone can dispute that adding two more tires to the back increases the load carrying ability of the truck.
Lets take emotion out of this and look at it for what it is.
SWR, DWR, Diesel, Gas, Crew Cab, etc etc etc are all tools designed to meet needs. If it meets your need than great!. If not... well get the appropriate tool for the job.
Thanks!
Jeremiah
Jun-14-2013 09:20 PM
Jun-14-2013 02:37 PM
Jun-14-2013 02:33 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:norm wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:Gemstone wrote:
"Thanks for your honest story!
I think too many people know they really should be towing with a Dually but make every excuse in the book to justify what they have"....
I hope that is not a slam against the rest of us who did not reply with a similar story....which are no doubt just as honest as the one referenced. Is it because the story fit your own preference for a DRW truck ? Did it help justify your personal decision ? I'm just curious as to why you seemed to weight this story more than the others ?
Understandably, there are people who should not be towing a particular rig with a particular truck, like new RV'ers who don't know any different, or as you allude to, hard headed RV'ers who won't accept the fact that they made a mistake. Not that I am looking for one, but I believe everyone who replied honestly about their real world experiences should be thanked for their input to the OP's question....
Threads like this will help new RV'ers make the right decision, and we know it won't do a thing for the hard headed population.
Regards
Gemstone
I appreciate people that realize what they have is not adequate for the job at hand and do something about it!
I could have beefed up my 98 2500 4X4 12V Ram with air bags and 19.5 tires and wheels and been like so many other people that put bandaids on their rigs and pretended it was fine. My Mobile Suites is very heavy so I stepped up and bought a 1 ton Dually to safely handle my new RV.
No slam as you put it but you are right the hard heads won't get it!
I must respectfully challenge your conclusions. To label those that disagree with your opinion as "hard heads" denotes a posture of superiority. Perhaps that is not your intention? Perhaps you can provide factual evidence to support your position? I must also respectfully point out that there is a significant performance difference between your 98 Ram and todays Rams. For that matter, there is a significant difference between a 98 Ram and my HO 04 Cummins. The intent of my post was not to provide a platform for arguing the personal opinions of the merits of DRW versus SRW. Just as I do not engage in posts that promote brand wars. I happen to like DRW's as much as SRW's. If you prefer one over the other because of personal like or dislike, fine, let your personal preference be known. But please do not marginalize another persons choice of equipment based upon unsupported claims of inferiority. Hopefully we are all beyond the "my toy is better than your's" phase of our childhoods by a comfortable and ego secure margin....:B
I am not the one that came up with the hard heads comment I just agreed with him.
The 98 is a different animal but it has the power to pull my MS and with 19.5 tires, air bags rear disk kit built trans and so on but it still would not be safe in my opinion.
The 98 has 300rwhp and 750tq on the Dyno.
The type of person that thinks everything is fine like the guy with the mega cab with 28K combined load are irresponsible in my opinion and should have a Dually.
No brand war here just know there are many people that know they should step but make every excuse in the world not to, like it wont fit in the garage or drive thru, hard to park the list goes on.
It is all about being responsible.
My experience with towing 3 different 5ers with single rear wheeled trucks and now a Dually with a much larger 5er there is no comparison even with 8K less weight with a single rear wheeled truck.
Jun-14-2013 01:52 PM
thomasmnile wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:gpshemi wrote:
06 3500 SRW Megacab w/ 285's / 3.73, towing Cyclone 3612 Toyhualer
Hitch: 3200lbs
Dry: 13,800lbs
CAT Scaled: ~28,000lbs with gear.
Runs good. Tows good. Been through two (unfortunately) emergency maneuver with it. Personally, still wouldn't want a DRW. Just my $0.02.
YMMV for sure and that's what really matters.
What does your TV rear axle weigh?
I just hope for your and others sake you don't blow a TV tire.
Dunno what his rear axle rating is, but I have the same truck ('05 3500 SRW, no big change in '06 that I know of) with 265 70R 17 tires (Load Range E, 3195lbs) on it and the rear axle weight rating is like 6300 lbs. When I had my fifth wheel, I (2450 loaded pin wt) very close to, but within the axle weight rating, and total combined gross weight was 20345 lbs.
Jun-14-2013 01:28 PM
Jun-14-2013 12:47 PM
Jun-14-2013 12:30 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:gpshemi wrote:
06 3500 SRW Megacab w/ 285's / 3.73, towing Cyclone 3612 Toyhualer
Hitch: 3200lbs
Dry: 13,800lbs
CAT Scaled: ~28,000lbs with gear.
Runs good. Tows good. Been through two (unfortunately) emergency maneuver with it. Personally, still wouldn't want a DRW. Just my $0.02.
YMMV for sure and that's what really matters.
What does your TV rear axle weigh?
I just hope for your and others sake you don't blow a TV tire.
Jun-14-2013 12:10 PM
norm wrote:
You have sparked my curiosity?....A couple of questions for you? Do you know what your 5er wet weight is? Do you have an auto? E brake?...You can PM me if you would prefer. I REALLY appreciate your post!