Mar-01-2014 05:15 PM
Mar-03-2014 04:24 AM
Mar-02-2014 06:17 PM
Mar-02-2014 05:43 PM
elkbelch wrote:
We do plan to weigh the trailer on the truck as soon as the weather clears. By locally I mean 200 to 300 miles and we do make 1 long trip (1000 plus miles) to a different National Park every year. If we were to go the 1 Ton rout we would certainly go with a DRW as the SRW would offer little practical advantage our current truck. I really have no Idea how much weight we take along, a weeks worth of clothes for the four of us and we generally buy all our groceries before we leave. It will be interesting to see how much we do haul with us.
Not saying it's right or wrong but we see much larger units on 250/2500 series trucks all the time.
Mar-02-2014 05:27 PM
What justifies the need for a DRW 1 ton in relation to GVWR, (i.e: 1 lb over, 25 lbs over, 500, 1,000 lbs over)?
Mar-02-2014 01:11 PM
Mar-02-2014 11:15 AM
john&bet wrote:elkbelch wrote:My current comb is a '04.5 Dodge/Cummins with a 9000# gvw,'05 32' Montana with a gvw of 12,100#. My gcvw is suppose to be 20,000#. I have never been more than 19,800# gcw whether we pack for 1 week or 3 weeks. We buy supplies and do laundry as needed. I have towed from southern Indiana to Great Falls,Mt. several times,from Moab,Ut via I-70 home,to FT. Meade,MD and to Charleston,S.C. My rig rides level without supplemental suspension parts and I don't blind on coming traffic on dim headlights. Just for some folks my front and rear axle weights are not exceeded and I don't have an exhaust brake. I have currently 160+k on truck and it has been used as a dd since new. We are planning a month plus trip this summer. I don't need more truck. Just food for thought.
We have a 2011 Ram 2500 CTD, GVWR is 9600 lbs. Today we went to a CAT Scale and weighed in at:
GVW 7740 we are allowed 9600 leaving us 2160 lbs
Front axle was 4580 lbs with a limit of 5500
Rear axle was 3160 lbs with a limit of 6010 lbs
This was with 1 occupant, full tank of fuel, weekly groceries & 100 lb of chicken feed, tools, etc.
We've been tossing around getting a 1 ton DRW. We tow a 2011 Jayco Eagle 30.5 RLS 5th wheel GVWR 11,200 lbs. We have not been able to weigh it yet, it's about 3,000 lbs heavier than our previous 5th wheel that we pulled with our previous 2003 Dodge 2500. Our current 2011 Dodge does seem to handle it well. We weekend camp locally and plan to take a 3,000+ mile camping trip in the summer. We were all over the country in our previous combo, however, it was a lighter 5th wheel.
We seem to be right on the line between 3/4 ton & 1 ton, however, we like our current truck, don't really want to invest in a new one if we really don't need to as our current one is loaded with all options. We do have the load lifter 5,000's in the garage, just haven't put them on yet and we know we'll be ok everywhere except the GVWR.
Question: With respect to our current unit being a daily driver & planning a 3,000+ mile trip this summer...when do you decide it's time to move up to a DRW 1 ton?
What justifies the need for a DRW 1 ton in relation to GVWR, (i.e: 1 lb over, 25 lbs over, 500, 1,000 lbs over)?
Mar-02-2014 08:53 AM
elkbelch wrote:My current comb is a '04.5 Dodge/Cummins with a 9000# gvw,'05 32' Montana with a gvw of 12,100#. My gcvw is suppose to be 20,000#. I have never been more than 19,800# gcw whether we pack for 1 week or 3 weeks. We buy supplies and do laundry as needed. I have towed from southern Indiana to Great Falls,Mt. several times,from Moab,Ut via I-70 home,to FT. Meade,MD and to Charleston,S.C. My rig rides level without supplemental suspension parts and I don't blind on coming traffic on dim headlights. Just for some folks my front and rear axle weights are not exceeded and I don't have an exhaust brake. I have currently 160+k on truck and it has been used as a dd since new. We are planning a month plus trip this summer. I don't need more truck. Just food for thought.
We have a 2011 Ram 2500 CTD, GVWR is 9600 lbs. Today we went to a CAT Scale and weighed in at:
GVW 7740 we are allowed 9600 leaving us 2160 lbs
Front axle was 4580 lbs with a limit of 5500
Rear axle was 3160 lbs with a limit of 6010 lbs
This was with 1 occupant, full tank of fuel, weekly groceries & 100 lb of chicken feed, tools, etc.
We've been tossing around getting a 1 ton DRW. We tow a 2011 Jayco Eagle 30.5 RLS 5th wheel GVWR 11,200 lbs. We have not been able to weigh it yet, it's about 3,000 lbs heavier than our previous 5th wheel that we pulled with our previous 2003 Dodge 2500. Our current 2011 Dodge does seem to handle it well. We weekend camp locally and plan to take a 3,000+ mile camping trip in the summer. We were all over the country in our previous combo, however, it was a lighter 5th wheel.
We seem to be right on the line between 3/4 ton & 1 ton, however, we like our current truck, don't really want to invest in a new one if we really don't need to as our current one is loaded with all options. We do have the load lifter 5,000's in the garage, just haven't put them on yet and we know we'll be ok everywhere except the GVWR.
Question: With respect to our current unit being a daily driver & planning a 3,000+ mile trip this summer...when do you decide it's time to move up to a DRW 1 ton?
What justifies the need for a DRW 1 ton in relation to GVWR, (i.e: 1 lb over, 25 lbs over, 500, 1,000 lbs over)?
Mar-02-2014 06:33 AM
Mar-02-2014 05:21 AM
Mar-02-2014 02:41 AM
Mar-01-2014 09:46 PM
mdamerell wrote:
Short answer is pin weight. A 11,200# trailer will have about 2,240# (20%) pin weight. Rule of thumb is 15-25%. Depends upon the trailer and how its loaded.
That puts you over GVWR. But some will say you're still OK on your rear axle. It's your call.
lenr wrote:
You answered the big question—does your present truck handle the trailer well. Since it does, you’re good for now. So, my dually answer is “when you buy the next trailer” or “when you become uncomfortable”. The biggest problem with the 2500 will be pin weight capacity, not CVWR or tow rating. Running it a little heavy will only wear the axle out a little faster, not break it. Depending on how big you think that you might go with a trailer, you could consider a 350/3500 SRW size of truck. That will have the additional rear axle weight capacity.
Mar-01-2014 09:29 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
1500 truck......up to 10,000# GVWR trailer
2500 truck......up to 12,000# GVWR trailer
3500 SWR truck.....up to 14,000# GVWR trailer
3500 DRW truck.....anything over 14K
****** with properly equipped truck :B
You are fine with your GVWR 11,200# trailer
Mar-01-2014 08:32 PM
Mar-01-2014 08:04 PM
Mar-01-2014 05:57 PM