โMar-25-2019 07:33 PM
โMar-27-2019 06:30 AM
sayoung wrote:So how is your attorney going to prove what Anything weighed at the time of the crash. Cause unless he is out there at the scene of the crime and takes possession of both vehicles then and there, he can prove nothing. He doesn't know how much water was in the tanks, whether the pantry was full or empty, how much stuff was in the back of the truck, etc., etc., etc.troubledwaters wrote:
If your in an accident and someone decides to sue you, whether you were towing 10,000 lbs or 12,000 lbs is never going to come up in the discussion. It's not realistic to try and prove to a jury (who knows nothing about towing, weights, or why it matters) how much the rear axle of the truck weighed at the scene of the accident 3 years ago, rather then you simply failed to stop in time.
My attorney would use that info to convince the jury you overloaded on purpose just to injure someone for enjoyment. There are some pretty good attorneys out there makeing a boat load of cash by using every tidbit of info that can remotely be added to the story of how negligent the defendent was. Civil suits are to the point the attorneys should have to belong to the Actors Guild as well as the Bar. I tell my Son this all the time as he is an Attorney.
โMar-27-2019 05:19 AM
troubledwaters wrote:
If your in an accident and someone decides to sue you, whether you were towing 10,000 lbs or 12,000 lbs is never going to come up in the discussion. It's not realistic to try and prove to a jury (who knows nothing about towing, weights, or why it matters) how much the rear axle of the truck weighed at the scene of the accident 3 years ago, rather then you simply failed to stop in time.
โMar-27-2019 04:06 AM
โMar-27-2019 03:59 AM
โMar-26-2019 08:38 PM
memtb wrote:
backwater83, We have a similar issue.....do not want a DRW. For our use of a truck, a DRW is very impractical. Our only use would be for towing.
Our5th wheel is at or slightly above (depending upon what weโre carrying) 20K pounds, with over 4K pin weight....and tow with our 2007 Ram SRW. And โโNOโ our rig it doesnโt comply with the โlittle yellow stickerโ. We have Firestone Air Bag system to maintain a level ride height. But, most importantly.....we put on aftermarket wheels and tires. We bought 19.5โ steel wheels manufactured right here in America by Riskson Wheel Manufacturing. They even have the proper offset for your particular vehicle....something not offered by the import wheels. Check out their website!! As we use our truck for off-road use, winter driving, ect. , we chose Hankook DH 07 tires all the way around. With two winters of ice, snow, and mud.....theyโve done about all you can ask! While the wheels/tires are not cheap....far less than $60 - $70 K for a new, unwanted truck!!!
Our Ram axle is rated plenty high enough for the weight, the tires/wheels were the problem. The Rickson Wheels and the Hankooks, brought us real close to 4K pounds each......the wheels are rated at 5K pounds each, the tires @3940 # each!
โMar-26-2019 08:17 PM
backwater83 wrote:
New to this forum,
โMar-26-2019 02:10 PM
Walaby wrote:
If you fixate on cargo capacity as the limiting factor, then yes, you likely will not be able to ever tow a 14,400lb 5er.
You have to decide for yourself how much weight/risk you put on exceeding cargo capacity vs rear axle weight.
I have a 1 ton Ram diesel. Cargo capacity is 3600(ish) if I recall. RGAWR is 7000lbs. I am currently towing a 5er that loaded, weights 13,500(ish I think,. going off memory). Pin weight is 3060(again memory). Loaded up, ready to camp, I exceed my cargo capacity by 20 lbs (so, maybe a couple buckets of chicken, and some ribs too probably), but am about 400 under my RGAWR. I have no issues with this, although there are some on here that will tell you (a) your truck will self destruct as soon as you put a pound over cargo capacity in it and/or (b) by exceeding payload by a pound you are going to put everyone, including all the leaders in the free world, in jeopardy, the minute you pull out of the driveway.
I subscribe the the RGAWR crowd, but you have to make your own decision based on a reasonable evaluation of the facts and your judgement.
Mike
โMar-26-2019 01:08 PM
โMar-26-2019 12:36 PM
time2roll wrote:The one thing everyone here appears to be missing is the word "Maximum". All Manufacturers quote capacity based on a base level truck with minimum equipment. They have no idea how you are going to configure your truck when you buy it, so the tow capacity and carrying capacity numbers WILL change when you spec out a loaded 4WD crew cab diesel.backwater83 wrote:What is the trailer GVWR?
New to this forum, but looking for advice. My truck is a 2014 F350 SRW. Stated fifth wheel capacity is 15,900. I'm looking to buy a 39 foot 5er that weighs in at 14,400 with a pin weight of 2900. No way I can tow that because my cargo capacity is 3113.
Otherwise to hit 15,900 you need a base model truck and probably a flatbed trailer where you can adjust the load over the axle just right to keep the pin weight in spec.
You can blame the truck manufacturer all you want but the issue is really with the trailer manufacturer not designing specifically to the truck specs. (your truck)
โMar-26-2019 11:01 AM
backwater83 wrote:What is the trailer GVWR?
New to this forum, but looking for advice. My truck is a 2014 F350 SRW. Stated fifth wheel capacity is 15,900. I'm looking to buy a 39 foot 5er that weighs in at 14,400 with a pin weight of 2900. No way I can tow that because my cargo capacity is 3113.
โMar-26-2019 10:31 AM
โMar-26-2019 10:23 AM
โMar-26-2019 10:14 AM
memtb wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Sad when people think "my rear axle is rated to carry XYZ so all I need is bags and 19.5's"
Sorry but there is much mort to it than that!
But hey it tows just fine!
Yes it does! ๐ Please elaborate, on your statement!
โMar-26-2019 09:35 AM
backwater83 wrote:
My issue is with the truck manufacturers advertised towing capacity. That number is completely unattainable based on cargo weights being so low. Use the 21,000 lb number for example. The cargo weight is 3200 pounds. There are NO trailers that weigh anywhere near 21000 pounds that wouldn't overload the cargo cap, so you'd never be able to tow what the manufacturer boasts, the manufacturers are misleading consumers big time. Just annoying.
โMar-26-2019 09:35 AM
memtb wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
Sad when people think "my rear axle is rated to carry XYZ so all I need is bags and 19.5's"
Sorry but there is much mort to it than that!
But hey it tows just fine!
Yes it does! ๐ Please elaborate, on your statement!