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Best Truck for New Camper?

Jimster
Explorer
Explorer
I need help choosing a truck for a new camper. My wife and I have narrowed our selection of a camper down to one with a wet weight of 4368 lbs or another with a wet weight of 4774 lbs. We want a 4x4 truck with a crew cab and would prefer SRW, and recently rented a Ford SuperDuty F350 with the lighter camper in Canada and it worked great for traveling the Demptser Highway and some pretty gnarly B.C. forest roads. Unfortunately, the Ford’s payload rating is 3800 lbs, suggesting that the truck we rented was overloaded with our camper.

Chevrolet’s 4x4 Silverado HD 3500 diesel’s payload is 4080 lbs, and Dodge’s Ram 3500 diesel’s payload is 4350 lbs.

How important is a truck’s GRVW and payload rating and what recommendation would you give us for a truck to haul the camper we want to buy and use boondocking and traveling the US and Canada? Should we look at DRWs rather than SRWs?

Thanks for your good advice to a newbie!
2016 Ford F-350 Lariat, LB, 6.7L Diesel, 4X4, 3.73 LSD, DRW, Camper Package, Firestone Ride-Rite Airbags, TireMaster A1A
2017 Arctic Fox 811, Arctic Fox Landing, 160 watt solar panel, Torklift Fast Guns, Camera-Source Plug & Play Camper Camera Kit
59 REPLIES 59

Vinsil
Explorer
Explorer
SoCalDesertRider wrote:
Yeah, definitely don't overload your tires (and wheels)!!

You likely may need to upgrade the wheels, to match the higher tire rating. Stock wheels are typically rated about even with the highest rated factory stock tire that is available for the truck on that wheel when new. Don't go assuming the wheel is rated for some other, unspecified higher number and think it's fine to overload it...


Yep. I carry 8200+ on my rear axle. Wheels got me 9k rating and tires good to 13,000 lbs. I have a confidence now.
2017 Ford F-350, crewcab, 4x4, 6.7 diesel.
2016 Thunderjet Luxor 21' limited edition, Yamaha powered.
2016 Wolf Creek 840-SOLD, Arctic Fox 990 ordered.

SoCalDesertRid1
Explorer
Explorer
Yeah, definitely don't overload your tires (and wheels)!!

You likely may need to upgrade the wheels, to match the higher tire rating. Stock wheels are typically rated about even with the highest rated factory stock tire that is available for the truck on that wheel when new. Don't go assuming the wheel is rated for some other, unspecified higher number and think it's fine to overload it...
01 International 4800 4x4 CrewCab DT466E Allison MD3060
69Bronco 86Samurai 85ATC250R 89CR500
98Ranger 96Tacoma
20' BigTex flatbed
8' truck camper, 14' Aristocrat TT
73 Kona 17' ski boat & Mercury 1150TB
92F350 CrewCab 4x4 351/C6 285 BFG AT 4.56 & LockRite rear

FireGuard
Explorer
Explorer
Grit dog wrote:
FireGuard wrote:
My camper weighs around 4800 lb wet and I carry it on a 16 Ram 3500 SRW.
Full of water and everything except personal items, I am 20 lbs under my RAWR with the stock Firestone tires.
I plan to upgrade to tires with a 4060 lb rating which will give me a pretty good margin.
With Stabil loads and Helwig Big Wig sway bar it handles pretty well. Much better than I thought it would.
With that said, if I knew I was going to have a TC this heavy and didn't have a truck yet I would get a DRW.


Seems you'd be heavier than the 7klbs the tires are rated for with that big a camper, unles the CG of the camper is waaay forward of the rear axle. But if you've weighed it then you have a well balanced setup.


Yep, 7320 on the rear axle at a CAT scale. Tires are rated at 3670 for 7340 total.
That is w/o any personal items so figure a few hundred more lbs plus more if I tow anything. Looking at tires with 4060 lb so that will give me over 8k lb.
13Jeep Wrangler
07 Ragen 21FB
12 Yamaha Super Tenere
14 Suzuki DR 650

SoCalDesertRid1
Explorer
Explorer
I've seen a few 18-wheelers hauling box van trailers, overturned in the roundabouts we have on your 2-lane highways around here. Those circles come up quick and at night, they are hard to see until you're right on top of them, if you miss the 20mph warning sign..
01 International 4800 4x4 CrewCab DT466E Allison MD3060
69Bronco 86Samurai 85ATC250R 89CR500
98Ranger 96Tacoma
20' BigTex flatbed
8' truck camper, 14' Aristocrat TT
73 Kona 17' ski boat & Mercury 1150TB
92F350 CrewCab 4x4 351/C6 285 BFG AT 4.56 & LockRite rear

FreebirdFlies
Explorer
Explorer
One thing to note is that not only heavier weights require the dually, but the TALLer the TC (higher CG) the more important the stability that the width of the dual rear wheels provide.
Some people can be comfortable with a lot of side to side sway, but not too many......

Side note caution:
If your running TALL with the blessing of a solid tailwind at your heels on a divided highway,
be sure to be real careful/conservative on your cloverleaf speeds. The side of the TC is a BIG sail in a wind, and if you add significant centrifugal force to a high CG plus wind...... It can ruin your day..... No mater dually or SRW.

Pete_k
Explorer
Explorer
I hauled our Okanagan 811-SL on my 2004 2500HD crew cab 4x4 short bed for years. I did have air bags, along with Rancho 9000 shocks, and Rickson 19.5 wheels and tires. I for one with it did not ever want for a extra set of tires in back. While pulling a 20ft boat behind it. But when we sold the T/C and got the 5th wheel. After 2 years I did go with a Bigger truck. And still have the 19.5's because I still want a T/C again. Along with a single wheel 3500 truck.
But now if I go with a T/C it will never fit on a single wheel truck. Or for that matter a 3500 for me. As the Host Mammoth should be on a 5500 that I have. Now to figure out how to get it on the bed that's on my 5500 now.




I love having single wheel truck. No issues of going anywhere I want to go. But after swapping to the 5500 over the 2500. No way would I ever go back to a single wheel truck for any big load again.
Pete
2022 Ram Big Horn DRW
2016 Eagle Cap 1200
2012 Landmark Key Largo
2005 Chevy Kodiak c5500 Cummins 5.9/Allison Trans

Mattyd
Explorer
Explorer
Sounds like you are on the right track.
I too wonder if your wife's exercises could be preformed on the floor instead of in bed. Coming from a 2012 Northern Lite to a 2016 AF 990 like you are considering...I think the NL had more head room than the AF. Feels that way at least.
My 990 loaded puts me right close to the max on my 2013 Ram Dualy crew long bed 4x4. I ended up wth Stable Loads and rear air bags.
If I wasn't set on having a built in gene this time I would have gone with the 811 but still would keep my dually.
2016 AF 990
2013 Ram 3500 Dually, Crew Cab, 4x4 CTD
Hellwig Rear Anti-Sway Bar
Torklift StableLoads & Fastguns
2014 Rubicon Unlimited

Steve_in_29
Explorer
Explorer
jimh425 wrote:
Those smaller lighter popups aren't very light unless you are talking about the stripped Four Wheel Campers. Shorter yes. 🙂

It's relative. The same size and options in a hardside would put me over the limits of a stock F350 SRW. Yet my truck carries our Outfitter without any suspension mods that so many have to add.
2007 F350,SC,LB,4x4,6.0/Auto,35" tires,16.5 Warn,Buckstop bumpers
2007 Outfitter Apex9.5,270W solar,SolarBoost2000e,2 H2K's,2KW inverter,2 20lb LP on slide out tray,4 Lifeline AGM bats,Tundra fridge
95 Bounder 28' ClassA sold
91 Jamboree 21' ClassC sold

Steve_in_29
Explorer
Explorer
Jimster wrote:
Steve: We started out looking at Outfitters and Hallmarks, but they don't offer enough space over the bed for my wife to do her back exercises each morning; she needs to be able to lay on her back and extend her legs out a bit. Without these exercises, she's toast all day with pain and tightness in her back (moral here: don't blow out your back if you can help it!!). We just about popped for a large Outfitter or Hallmark after touring their factories, but were surprised when we found that we enjoyed the space of a small slide-out that was also capable of getting up the Dempster and back into some of northern BC's logging and mining roads. I still like the idea of a pop-up TC for getting into the wilds, but that won't work for the two of us.
We also looked at Northern Lites, which are attractive for their weight, craftsmanship and good resale value, but they also don't offer the headroom above the bed that we need.
Does your wife HAVE to do the exercise in bed before moving at all? Or could she possibly move to the dinette to do them?
2007 F350,SC,LB,4x4,6.0/Auto,35" tires,16.5 Warn,Buckstop bumpers
2007 Outfitter Apex9.5,270W solar,SolarBoost2000e,2 H2K's,2KW inverter,2 20lb LP on slide out tray,4 Lifeline AGM bats,Tundra fridge
95 Bounder 28' ClassA sold
91 Jamboree 21' ClassC sold

SoCalDesertRid1
Explorer
Explorer
The best thing you can do with a dually on any low traction surface, is load it up! The more weight you put on those 4 rears, the better traction you have.
01 International 4800 4x4 CrewCab DT466E Allison MD3060
69Bronco 86Samurai 85ATC250R 89CR500
98Ranger 96Tacoma
20' BigTex flatbed
8' truck camper, 14' Aristocrat TT
73 Kona 17' ski boat & Mercury 1150TB
92F350 CrewCab 4x4 351/C6 285 BFG AT 4.56 & LockRite rear

Grit_dog
Nomad III
Nomad III
With a big ole camper on, you'll eliminate any concerns with float or too low of ground pressure. Good mud/snow tires are still key though.
Dedicated snows or siped mudders will wear rather quickly though under the load.
If I was picking the best set of all condition tires for a heavy loaded dually I'd roll with aggressive ATs fo best tire life or siped quality mudders like Toyos, Coopers or Duratracs at the expense of some tread life.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

jimh406
Explorer III
Explorer III
For how I use my truck they are ok on the highway. They obviously are loud compared to less aggressive tread.

Btw, I had 19.5s on the SRW, 245/70s Gs. I have 225/70/19.5 Fs now. They didn't make Gs in 225s.

'10 Ford F-450, 6.4, 4.30, 4x4, 14,500 GVWR, '06 Host Rainer 950 DS, Torklift Talon tiedowns, Glow Steps, and Fastguns. Bilstein 4600s, Firestone Bags, Toyo M655 Gs, Curt front hitch, Energy Suspension bump stops.

NRA Life Member, CCA Life Member

Jimster
Explorer
Explorer
jimH425: I like the Hankook DH-01's 14 plies! How do they handle on the highway?
2016 Ford F-350 Lariat, LB, 6.7L Diesel, 4X4, 3.73 LSD, DRW, Camper Package, Firestone Ride-Rite Airbags, TireMaster A1A
2017 Arctic Fox 811, Arctic Fox Landing, 160 watt solar panel, Torklift Fast Guns, Camera-Source Plug & Play Camper Camera Kit

Grit_dog
Nomad III
Nomad III
For all the traveling you're planning, a dually is pretty much a must especially since you're going to end up w a heavy camper it sounds.
And don't worry about getting electronic shift 4wd. Of the 1000 electrical gadgets on new trucks, elect 4wd is one of the oldest and most reliable of "modern convienences."
Sounds like you're putting together an ultimate TC setup.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5” turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold