Sep-12-2007 09:05 PM
Mar-01-2009 07:55 PM
Feb-25-2009 01:50 PM
ramcneal wrote:
Okay. I've now weighed my rig three different times; empty truck, truck with new fifth wheel, and rig loaded for a weekend. I'll weight it one more time on the 7th of March after we've loaded the kitchen up with food for a week and clothes before our trip to Phoenix for Spring Training.
Am I overloaded? Strictly speaking yes I'm overloaded on the GVWR. I'm below the 6200lbs on the rear axle and well under the 20k for the combined weight. I'm going to look into Colorado's laws and see if they allow us to purchase a higher rating like TX. I've been told that TX allows you to run at your axle ratings, if you pay the licensing fee, which is higher than the GVWR which is a good indication to me that the GVWR is bogus. Add to that the difference between my 9000lbs GVWR 2500 and the 10,100lbs GVWR 3500 is a set of springs I feel very safe. I've upgraded the rear suspension and added an exhaust brake.
This is not an endorsement that people should blindly ignore ratings. After doing a bunch of reading on this forum and others for the past three months I've come to realize there are three different types of people when it comes to towing. (1) The weight police. These are the folks who state you can't, should not go over any of the ratings. End of story. (2) People like myself who read and understand their limits, understand just how much weight they are pulling. (3) The last group are the folks who heard about somebody who pulled 30k of hay on a 10k trailer without problems which means their little 1/2 ton truck can pull a 15k trailer safely. So what if the truck sags a little and takes three times the distance to stop. These folks are the ones who the group in #1 are really screaming at or about.
If you disagree with me I would love to hear it. Please feel free to either follow up this post a general education or send me a private message either through this board or at 'ramcneal @ gmail.com' (remove the spaces).
Feb-25-2009 12:17 PM
Feb-20-2009 01:34 PM
Feb-20-2009 06:34 AM
maverick66 wrote:
Hey Everyone. Thanks so much for this great information. I am currently shopping for a truck with the purchase of our first 5-ver planned for 6-8 months from now. I've been debating between F250 diesel longbed and F350 diesel longbed dually. Although I would have liked to have the (relative) compact size of a SWD F250, after reading the posts and a number of articles I've decided to go with an F350 dually to give myself plenty of "room to grow" on the rear axle. I'll also likely opt for higher gear ratio to get extra towing capacity.
This will be my first dually truck and I just wanted to ask the folks out there if there are any major handling differences between a SWD and DWD. From a purely handling perspective do folks prefer one over the other? Also, is it a real pain to replace a tire or check the tire pressure on the inner tire of a dually? Thanks again everyone!
Feb-20-2009 06:33 AM
dubdub07 wrote:
There is no difference, minus the rear leaf! Our weights are similar, and I don't expect any problems and I plan to tow through the mountains. It is a Cummins!
Feb-19-2009 08:18 PM
Feb-19-2009 07:55 PM
ramcneal wrote:
We just picked up our first 5th wheel today. I weighed my truck prior to having the hitch installed and today when I picked up my trailer. These numbers are from a certified CAT scale.
Just truck:
Steer axle: 4260
Drive axle: 2780
Total: 7040
Truck and 5th wheel
Steer axle: 4300
Drive axle: 5260
Trailer axle: 7600
Pin weight: 2480
Total: 17160
I plan getting a loaded weight again once I fill the propane takes and add about 30 gallons of water which is what we normally carry. From the looks of things the grey water tank is located over the trailer axles, not sure were the fresh water tank is located since the belly of the trailer is enclosed. So it'll be interesting to see how much weight is added to the pin. Two 30lb propane tanks should be about 80lbs I believe and 30 gallons of water is 249lbs.
My truck is a Dodge 2006 2500 Cummins, short bed with a GVWR of 9,000, RAWR 6,000 (tire limit, axle rating is 10k), and GCWR of 20,000.
My trailer is a 2008 Keystone Challenger 32RKS. This model has the kitchen in the very back and after loading our stuff I would actually expect my pin weight to be lighter since 90+% of the stuff we loaded went into the kitchen. Admittedly not much.
So, I'm over the GVWR by 560lbs. We've already loaded the trailer with our stuff which took my wife and I about 30 minutes. We both laughed because it seems like 90% of the cabinets are empty. I'm not worried about going over the GVWR for a couple of reasons. (1) A SRW 3500 with otherwise the same configuration has a GVWR of 10,100. Everything is the same except for the rear springs. (2) I added air bags and an exhaust brake. (3) When I towed it home I had to readjust my brake controller to apply less pressure because I could feel the trailer really pulling hard. I like a neutral feel when the trailer is hooked up and it indicates to me that the trailer has more than sufficient braking. (4) Finally, the mechanic said he let a little air out of my air bags when installing the hitch. When I got home and checked the pressure I found out he let all of the air out. My truck didn't even sag with the stock springs. Well, it did go down a little, but the truck ended up looking level instead of slightly high in the back.
So, some here may condemn me for going over the GVWR. To those I can only ask how is my truck any different than a 3500.
Feb-18-2009 03:38 PM
Feb-18-2009 10:53 AM
Feb-18-2009 06:02 AM
Feb-17-2009 09:37 PM
Feb-17-2009 07:03 PM
Feb-15-2009 06:51 PM
Feb-10-2009 08:10 AM
Lakemann wrote:
The scale I was on, was at the local garbage transfer station so I couldnt get axle weights. The truck is bone empty, nothing but me and full tank of fuel. No tools,no hitch,nothing! I find it hard to believe that this truck can only "legally" handle another 1380# of payload. When I throw my wife and kids into the mix, I'm looking at just around 1,000# payload. I bought this thing with the intentions of buying a small fifth wheel. Could the scale be off?