Dso66 wrote:
I'm not being a smart guy and I'm not normally dense. But I've asked the question and have seen it asked. How do I get the right truck for the rig. The pat answer is. "Take it to a scale and get it weighed." What am I missing? I don't have a truck capable of towing the rv The few friends I have don't have a truck capable of towing the rv. So besides running the numbers listed and leaving leeway what does a guy do?
We bought our RV and had it delivered to our "resort/CG" as part of the deal. We store our RV at the CG and they would move it onto a site or into storage for $10 each way. Now that we had the RV we wanted I started to search for a truck. Many people said just get a 3/4 ton and you're all set. You can drive yourself crazy looking at all the spec sheets. Trucks 2004 and older are rated different than the new trucks and since I did not have $50-60,000 to spend on a new truck I ended up buying a bigger truck to meet my needs. Better to have too big a truck than too small.
The sticker on my RV said it weighted 10,500# empty and 14,000# GVWWR (rounded off numbers) so I guessed around 12,000# with all our junk loaded to camp. Rule of thumb is a 5er is 20% pin weight and a TT is about 15% hitch weight. So I needed to carry a 2,400# pin. Rounded to 3,000# cargo capacity and started looking for a truck in my budget with at least a 3,000# cargo capacity.
I started with a trucks GVWR found on the driver's door pillar. A diesel crew cab dually weights around 8,000# (ball park) so a 11,500# GVWR - 8,000# is about 3,500# cargo. The dealer should be able to give you the curb weight and then I'd add 500# to it before subtracting from the GVWR for a fudge factor. If you are concerned about what the truck weights you can always stop by a local scale on the test drive and pay the $10 to weight the truck.
Once you feel pretty good about the trucks cargo capacity you need to look at the GCVWR or the total the truck can handle with a trailer. In 2004 most trucks topped out at 20,000# newer trucks are much higher. So for example a 20,000# GCVWR - 8,000# (truck) = a 12,000# trailer
Once it's all yours and you are ready to co camping a quick trip across the scales will confirm you are all within spec.
Hope that helps.
2012 Sundance 3100RB w/Reese Goose Box
2004 Ford F350 6.0 L PSD, CC, DRW, long bed, B&W drop ball hitch, Firestone Ride-rite air bags.