โJul-01-2016 02:18 PM
โJul-02-2016 09:58 AM
BenK wrote:I agree.
. . . 99.99 percent of the time...most will never have Mr Murphy cross their path
and they typically say only happens to 'the other guy'...tell that
to that other guy...
To each, this risk management decision (gambling) is yours alone...not
what others advise...for they have no skin in your game...
โJul-02-2016 09:30 AM
โJul-02-2016 09:16 AM
rhagfo wrote:
Otrfun, the example in your post is an extreme case and the owner was either not aware or just didn't care!!!!! Over tire, and axle, you really can't fix stupid!
Early in my career while still working part time through college, an
old engineer took me under his wing...taught me lots that are now my
value. Taught all the engineers working for me the same thing:
"Design it for the idiot and gorilla"...'as if they can misuse it or
abuse it...they will"
That is the 'why' of all the cautionary labels, signs, etc, etc
on all things...from the microwave to TV to vehicles to medicine
to even clothing...
Yes many like myself run over GVWR, but respect axle and tire ratings! I have seen rigs like you described, they just don't look at anything but what looks cool!
I my case we were headed to Oregon coast on a snow covered Highway 6, it was a 4X4 diesel big tires, pulling a TT toy hauler. There was a snow plow in front and we were going about 45 to 50 and the guy was about a car length behind the plow!
Any sudden movement slowing or stop of the plow he would be wrapped around it.
That is a Mr Murphy moment
โJul-02-2016 08:57 AM
โJul-02-2016 08:00 AM
blangen wrote:Yes the 100# over might be a contributing factor. Kinda like going 2 mph over the speed limit.
One additional point on all of the very good advise above: Should Mr. Murphy ever appear, there will be police accident investigators with tape measures, cameras, etc (and insurance investigators after them) noting every detail. Even if your experience is that there has been no down-side to your over weight rating, you can bet it will come up in that investigation and, at least, it WILL become a contributing factor. Choosing to be over weight is choosing to be on the hook when/if that time comes.
otrfun wrote:Yes I agree don't do this. I speculate he was speeding also...
I think it was more than a ton over GVWR, and the rear axle limit and GCVWR were off the carts.
โJul-02-2016 07:52 AM
โJul-02-2016 07:34 AM
Need-A-Vacation wrote:
Have you actually weighed your rig combo at a CAT Scale?
Need-A-Vacation wrote:
Have you add any accessories to your Chevy: step bars, tonneau cover/truck topper, etc?
Need-A-Vacation wrote:
Did you install the 3.73 gear set? If not, it was my understanding that only the Max Tow trucks with the 6.2 had the 3.73's. The 5.3 trucks had a max of the 3.42's.
โJul-02-2016 07:33 AM
LarryJM wrote:
A vehicles GVWR is not generally limited by any one physical attribute since the individual GAWRs almost always exceed the stated vehicle GVWR to allow for loading variances. A vehicles GVWR is mainly set by the strict FMVSS safety braking performance certification and that's whyt the GVWR is always listed on that sticker on the driver's side door label. Thus according to the Federal government if you exceed the GVWR then you are no longer operating that vehicle in conformance with the federally mandated safety standards. It is extremely expensive to run and document a vehicle thru the federally mandated braking performance protocals and get it thru all the hoops to have it certified for a particular vehicle GVWR. Of course the other major factor that is GVWR is how the vehicle is classified and what other general FMVSS standards it has to meet or what classification that GVWR makes it. One area I'm not sure of is say you test and get for example an F-350 certified for a GVWR of 14,000 can you sticker it at say 9,500 (for state registrations/taxing purposes), w/o tested that same exact vehicle at that second 9,500 GVWR??? ... that I don't know and never asked the brake expert I got most of my other info on this from.
Of course then it really gets complicated when you hook a towed vehicle up since no that combo is surely over the GVWR of just the vehicle alone and while a lot of trailers have brakes what happens when you hook one of say these 2K trailers that don't require brakes up to a vehicle that is say already within 500lbs of it's door sticker GVWR???????. Now you have a vehicle with a certified braking system of say 10,000lbs that weighs 9500 by itself, but is trying to stop a total weight of 11,500 lbs clearly 1,500 lbs over the 10 certified braking performance????
Larry
โJul-02-2016 04:54 AM
โJul-02-2016 03:59 AM
โJul-02-2016 02:01 AM
BenK wrote:
There is only one person responsible for the setup...the driver...even
if they did NOT choose the parts & adjust it all. You can have a 1,000
printouts of folks saying 'sure you can'...'been doing it for decades
with no problems'...opinion consensus them all...again they have no
skin in the game...only the driver does
The OP is asking about GVWR, which has an 'R' in the acronym, which is
'RATING' from that OEM. The other acronyms also have that 'R' in there
That number rating is their MAXIMUM for that product.
All of the specifications from any OEM is their contract to you that
also comes with a warranty (with terms). Most on any vehicle sold for
public roads here in North America also has regulatory agency certifications
to that 'R'...
Then those specifications has fine print that modifies all of the specifications
listed on all their stuff
I do NOT ever say you are good for it, or any such thing...but...provide
the info to make the risk decision (AKA gambling)
Note that all things designed/engineered for public consumption are
NOT for the good days out there...but...for that day Mr Murphy crosses
your path.
Either you have the right sized/rated/etc or not spot on...there will
be no time to go back to the store for bigger/better/etc...nor will
there be time to re-adjust anything
Many consume the OEM's design margin thinking they are good for it...well
maybe for a while, but things will wear out sooner than later and that
day Mr Murphy crosses your path...will there be enough to MANHANDLE
the situation?
All of my offroaders and trucks have gotten bigger over time. Realized
both that I have my family along and that I'm not as invincible as
thought was back in my 20's...been there done that too many times...
โJul-02-2016 01:34 AM
โJul-02-2016 01:25 AM
โJul-01-2016 08:41 PM
โJul-01-2016 08:38 PM