Mar-30-2014 03:53 PM
May-26-2015 09:50 AM
Sep-26-2014 04:28 PM
CKNSLS wrote:blt2ski wrote:
THen again, some states, like Washington, DO NOT follow the manufactures numbers from a licensing stand point. You buy a truck plate in even 2000 lb increments at 150% of the tare/empty wt! Both of my sons have 15 series trucks, one a Tacoma, the other a GM 1500, BOTH have 8K plates on them, THEY are legal to 8K lbs. Not the 5600 or there abouts for the toyota, or the 6800 or there about for the GM 1500.
My 2000 C2500 I am driving now, has an 8K plate, I am NOT legal to the door sticker of 8600. This truck weighs all of 4800, so an 8K plate is minimum. My old 05 dually had a 14K plate, base was 7200 lbs. I needed a 12K minimum. I bought a 14 as I found myself weighing in at that amount coming out of scale houses.
The door sticker for my Navistar is 18200, which happens to be in my office, NOT on the door. As that truck was incomplete when I bought it. IT is up to the body manufacture to apply an appropriate door sticker per say. So if they add a drop, tag, different tires, rims, springs etc, they can up the frame/incomplete body manufacture numbers. MANY if not most Type A motor homes with tags came from the factory WITH OUT the tag, yet the door sticker includes the tag axel as part of the gvwr!
Take this all for what it is worth, but the door sticker means squat in MANY jursdictions, if not all if they follow the true wt law in the US, which happens to be the "Federal Bridge Laws" You get 20K per axel, as long as you have enough tire width to spread/bridge the load across the highway. If not, then you limit yourself to less than that.
But with this in mind, an LEO CAN and WILL get you off the road if you are unsafe. Being over a manufactures limit WILL NOT get you off the road......I've been pulled over at 27K+ lbs in my Navistar, I have yet to get an over wt ticket! As I am good to over 30K per the tire width and per axel amount. My 05 3500 dually, gets the same legal max wt. A typical sw pickup will be good to 20K lbs or so. Assuming you know how to push the rules. Not going to recommend one being at 20K gvw with a 1500, or a sw 3500 for that matter.......but it is legal!
marty
It may be legal but if someone runs in to me over their door sticker they better have a darn good Lawyer because I will sue for negligence. It will be great if someone runs in to me with a half-ton with a maximum tow rating of 9,600 pounds and they are pulling 12,000 pounds. Yea, explain to the jury how being over both tow rating and payload is safe. Good luck with that one.
Sep-26-2014 03:18 PM
blt2ski wrote:
THen again, some states, like Washington, DO NOT follow the manufactures numbers from a licensing stand point. You buy a truck plate in even 2000 lb increments at 150% of the tare/empty wt! Both of my sons have 15 series trucks, one a Tacoma, the other a GM 1500, BOTH have 8K plates on them, THEY are legal to 8K lbs. Not the 5600 or there abouts for the toyota, or the 6800 or there about for the GM 1500.
My 2000 C2500 I am driving now, has an 8K plate, I am NOT legal to the door sticker of 8600. This truck weighs all of 4800, so an 8K plate is minimum. My old 05 dually had a 14K plate, base was 7200 lbs. I needed a 12K minimum. I bought a 14 as I found myself weighing in at that amount coming out of scale houses.
The door sticker for my Navistar is 18200, which happens to be in my office, NOT on the door. As that truck was incomplete when I bought it. IT is up to the body manufacture to apply an appropriate door sticker per say. So if they add a drop, tag, different tires, rims, springs etc, they can up the frame/incomplete body manufacture numbers. MANY if not most Type A motor homes with tags came from the factory WITH OUT the tag, yet the door sticker includes the tag axel as part of the gvwr!
Take this all for what it is worth, but the door sticker means squat in MANY jursdictions, if not all if they follow the true wt law in the US, which happens to be the "Federal Bridge Laws" You get 20K per axel, as long as you have enough tire width to spread/bridge the load across the highway. If not, then you limit yourself to less than that.
But with this in mind, an LEO CAN and WILL get you off the road if you are unsafe. Being over a manufactures limit WILL NOT get you off the road......I've been pulled over at 27K+ lbs in my Navistar, I have yet to get an over wt ticket! As I am good to over 30K per the tire width and per axel amount. My 05 3500 dually, gets the same legal max wt. A typical sw pickup will be good to 20K lbs or so. Assuming you know how to push the rules. Not going to recommend one being at 20K gvw with a 1500, or a sw 3500 for that matter.......but it is legal!
marty
Sep-26-2014 01:59 PM
Sep-26-2014 12:52 PM
Sep-26-2014 11:41 AM
Apr-06-2014 06:59 PM
awoodwaring wrote:
This is actually my favorite trailer (but may go a little shorter due to liking state parks):
http://www.cruiserrv.com/products/shadow-cruiser/floorplans/item/s-314tsb
Hitch Weight (lbs) 725
Dry Weight (lbs) 6,290
Cargo Capacity (lbs) 3235
However, I am reluctant to go to the 2500 due to gas costs (it would be a day to day commuter...45 miles/185 days per year)
Mar-31-2014 08:48 PM
Mar-31-2014 07:58 PM
CKNSLS wrote:You missed the point that we were NOT talking about an American truck in America, but American trucks sold in foreign countries....the "yellow sticker" is not applicable, or even attached on trucks made to be sold in a foreign country.jareddustin wrote:The Texan wrote:l001952119 wrote:Not entirely true......Yes, the engineers determine the actual numbers, THEN the bean counting legal department determines the "published" numbers, which are considerably lower than the ones the engineers derived. You think not, go look up the identical truck, sold in a foreign country and look at their published numbers.....It will open your eyes.
Pay attention to the GM published weight ratings. They are determined by engineers, not wayward RV'er's!
where can you see these numbers? i would love to see what my truck is rated for in a different (not sue happy, everything is the other guys fault) country
Look inside you drivers door jam. There is a yellow and white sticker with the tire sizes listed on it. Underneath the tire sizes it will say something as follows- "Passengers and cargo for this vehicle shall not exceed XXXX". This is the (payload) number you must take in to consideration when choosing a trailer. Just because a manufacturer says you can tow a 10,000 pound trailer does not make it so once you account for ALL CARGO. TONGUE WEIGHT AND PASSENGERS you will have when your trailer is hooked up.
There is no mystery here.....
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
Mar-31-2014 07:46 PM
jareddustin wrote:The Texan wrote:l001952119 wrote:Not entirely true......Yes, the engineers determine the actual numbers, THEN the bean counting legal department determines the "published" numbers, which are considerably lower than the ones the engineers derived. You think not, go look up the identical truck, sold in a foreign country and look at their published numbers.....It will open your eyes.
Pay attention to the GM published weight ratings. They are determined by engineers, not wayward RV'er's!
where can you see these numbers? i would love to see what my truck is rated for in a different (not sue happy, everything is the other guys fault) country
Mar-31-2014 05:34 PM
Bob & Betsy - USN Aviation Ret'd '78 & LEO Ret'd '03 & "Oath Keeper Forever"
Mar-31-2014 04:56 PM
The Texan wrote:l001952119 wrote:Not entirely true......Yes, the engineers determine the actual numbers, THEN the bean counting legal department determines the "published" numbers, which are considerably lower than the ones the engineers derived. You think not, go look up the identical truck, sold in a foreign country and look at their published numbers.....It will open your eyes.
Pay attention to the GM published weight ratings. They are determined by engineers, not wayward RV'er's!
Mar-31-2014 04:51 PM
Mar-31-2014 04:49 PM
awoodwaring wrote:
Looking at trying to tow a 30BHS (type) travel trailer. Most of these types of trailers are coming in with a loaded weight of 9600 lbs (give or take).
My eyes are starting to gloss over on the TV. If it lists max conventional trailering...does that mean Chevy has done the math and I can be safe with any trailer fully loaded at 9800 lbs??
Will the 3.42 axle ratio work for proposed trailer?
Specs on the 2014 Chevy 1500 5.3L EcoTec3 V8 engine 2WD (crew cab, short box)
Trailering & Payload
Curb Weight 5042 lbs
Max Payload 2007 lbs
Max GVWR 7200 lbs
Max Conventional Trailering, 3.42 Rear Axle 9800 lbs
GCWR, 3.42 Rear Axle 15000 lbs
Spring Axle Capacity 5.3L EcoTec3 V8 engine 2WD
Front Gross Axle Weight Rating 3650 lbs
Rear Gross Axle Weight Rating 3950 lbs