mkirsch wrote:
When did he ask that?
What he asked was:
1. Are dually brackets unsafe?
2. Are duallys bad in snow?
My original questions were answered. Since as the OP I read the responses in detail, let me try to summarize (and of course ask some new questions).
The short answer was that DRW on snow and ice is workable. If it becomes necessary, when the camper is off the truck put some dead weight in back of the truck bed. Also, more aggressive tires will help.
The talk about that with a dually the wind or a passing semi doesn't push you around. That is what pushes my decision to want a dually as the priority over parking and snow/ice.
In more detail, specifically my original question was about using the truck without the camper for my daily drive including in the winter (with the camper off the truck, since I don't plan to winter camp). The response was that you are not going to rule the road with a dually, but especially with 4x4 you will get by.
This surprises me in all the discussion I have read it never came up before that this is another reason to want a 4x4. Truck Camper Magazine did a reader survey about 4x4 where the majority opinion was yes for 4x4 being desirable (because there will someday be a time when you are very glad you have it). But I now realize that discussion was all about (summer) camping. Now this is another reason for 4x4 that it helps if you want to use the truck as a daily drive in the winter.
Also, as mkirsch and others said, if it becomes necessary put some dead weight in back of the truck bed.
Also, the possibility of more aggressive tires to help in snow and ice. 2BLAZERS said: "When it comes time for new tires I go with Goodyear Duratracs that have the snowflake rating". I looked at these tires on the Goodyear website and they look great. They are supposed to be good on snow, ice, mud as well as highway. I suppose the tradeoff is cost (and maybe ride?). They were listed at $174 per tire on the Goodyear website.
Although most people seem to upgrade to Michelins, not Goodyear. And there is the talk about "china bomb" tires (tires made in China that have too much tendency for blow outs with the weight of a truck camper or trailer). I don't know where the Goodyear tires are manufactured.
Multiple people said they have extensive experience with duallys on snow and it is workable. My conclusion is to not let concern about snow and ice talk me out of a dually.
As far as dually brackets, the short answer was don't worry it. You may get more wobble with dually brackets, but people do camp off the truck with dually brackets. Torklift Wobble Stops will help, or as one person said "old fashioned blocking".
Specifically Bedlam clearly answered the original question: "The jack extension brackets do allow the camper to wobble a little more than without them. Blocking the TC underside or using WobbleStoppers from Torklift will reduce that movement. I have no worries about the brackets being of adequate strength to hold TC and occupants in regular off-truck use." Also the Super_Dave first mention of Wobble Stops: "Wobble Stops or just some good old fashioned blocking".
There were several stories intermixed in the responses about failed brackets and brackets separating (whether it is the bracket itself or the connection to the camper, for example 54suds "I have seen at least 4 campers who's swing out brackets bent to dangerous angles"). I would think the laws of physics say that the further the jack is from the camper the more stress there will be on brackets (same as the longer the tow extension the more tongue weight on the hitch).
stevenal pointed to the official Happijack manual that said you should support the floor for living in the camper off the truck. It would seem to make sense to me to take the care to use jacks and blocks to reduce wobble and take stress off the camper and jacks. I googled this topic and found this old thread about jacks and blocking:
https://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/27139204
It doesn't sound hard to take some extra care and jack the floor. I am thinking when I get the 3/4" horse mat for the truck bed mat that I will save some pieces to glue onto boards for the jacking. That cushion would be good to protect the underside of the camper and give some stress cushion.
Then the next question is where to store the jacks when the camper is loaded? Possibly the jacks and boards will fit into the truck bed between the wheel well and cab (I don't know if that is possible, maybe someone knows the answer to this).
So it seems floor jacks and Wobble Stops are two solutions to wobble, and both will reduce stress on the camper jack brackets. But I would think jacking will reduce more stress than Wobble Stops. It is carrying the Wobble Stops vs carrying the jacks. The Wobble Stops are probably easier to set up (and have the anti-theft feature), but if jacks have the added advantage of reducing more stress on the camper jack brackets that is a tradeoff.
Obviously people successfully truck camp with SRW and without blocking, so there is no right or wrong answer.
On the other hand (to change the topic), this is getting complex.....
I have a lot of other learning curve here. I could defer the whole topic by at first just leaving the camper loaded on the truck. Get through the other learning curve topics in my early camping (remember that I have zero truck camping experience), then work on wobble, jacks and blocking later.
For me, I am looking towards a lightweight non-slide long bed with minimal overhand camper on a dually. With that rig the camper will be about the same width as truck, and the rig will be only slightly longer with the camper on the truck.
I don't see what the advantage will be of unloading the camper. With the rig I am going towards parking won't be easier with the camper offloaded. I suppose less weight to carry for local drives, but the difference in gas cost couldn't be much for limited miles local driving. I suppose to avoid unhooking the electric and water to drive into town, and maybe having to level again when get back to the campground. But is that worth the trouble to unload the camper? This is an opinion I have heard before that this is an advantage of a non-slide lightweight camper (if you are willing to live in a smaller camper, which I am) that then you can leave it on the truck. Experience will tell. And this is a question. I am changing the subject asking for opinions about why people want to unload the camper.
Lance 850 truck camper
2016 Ram 3500 regular cab long bed 4x4 DRW 6.4L HEMI gas