โJul-06-2018 07:33 AM
โJul-08-2018 04:55 AM
demiles wrote:
โฆโฆ Iโm not going to continue to play the โtell me what I want to hearโ game.
โJul-07-2018 12:47 PM
MFL wrote:Grit dog wrote:
Shiner, your preaching to the choir, this horse is beat down dead. (But you were looking for the debate when you started the thread anyway)
Yup, Grit has nailed it again!
I can remember someone, I think a Mod, maybe Barney, posting a pick of a dead horse, upside down on it's back.
I,m just going to add my .02, that I have posted before. If only the folks towing an RV, staying within all/every rating of the TV, were allowed on the public roadways, I'd not need a camping reservation, even on Holidays. ๐
Jerry
โJul-07-2018 10:38 AM
Grit dog wrote:
Shiner, your preaching to the choir, this horse is beat down dead. (But you were looking for the debate when you started the thread anyway)
โJul-07-2018 09:19 AM
โJul-07-2018 08:24 AM
nickthehunter wrote:
Iโll tell him (hopefully once he hears it heโll be done).
Shiner - you are indeed smarter than the manufacturers. The manufacturerโs engineers are stupid and know nothing about the products they are designing. You indeed have figured it out and everyone here should ignore the manufacturerโs ratings and go by the โSihiner Ratingsโ instead.
โJul-07-2018 08:13 AM
demiles wrote:ShinerBock wrote:demiles wrote:
A single axle weight rating alone doesnโt necessarily dictate vehicle performance as a whole. Here is some information about GVWR vs AWR from Bob Raybuck Director of Technical Services NTEA.
โThereโs a common misconception that a truckโs GVWR is determined by adding gross axle weight ratings (GAWRs) together for all axles. Although this was a common way of calculating GVWR many years ago, itโs no longer an accurate method. The chassis manufacturer task of establishing a vehicle GVWR is much more difficult today due to advancement of safety system standards and how vehicles meet these requirements. This is why many trucks have a GVWR much lower than the combined axle ratings. It is not uncommon for a truck with a GVWR of 19,500 pounds to have a front axle rated at 7,500 pounds and a rear axle rated at 14,700 pounds. Safety standards that apply to braking, vehicle stability, and chassis manufacturer internal standards for durability, dynamic stability and handling can restrict GVWR even though the sum of the axle ratings exceeds 22,000 pounds. In this instance, the OEM set the GVWR at 19,500 pounds based on test results and vehicle dynamic performance to ensure a safe, reliable truck.โ
My truck has the same front axle, front suspension, rear axle, transmission, engine, and frame rating as a 3500 which is rated to handle more GVWR than 10k. The only major difference in ratings is the 500 less rear GAWR due to its coil suspension. So the truck itself can handle more GVWR than it my 2550 is rated and its weakest link is the rear suspension which has a greater GAWR than the F350 that ha a greater GVWR.
There are different requirements in the testing for class 2 and class 3 trucks for these safety standards. If you need a class 3 truck get one, Iโm not going to continue to play the โtell me what I want to hearโ game.
โJul-07-2018 06:18 AM
demiles wrote:Iโll tell him (hopefully once he hears it heโll be done).ShinerBock wrote:demiles wrote:
A single axle weight rating alone doesnโt necessarily dictate vehicle performance as a whole. Here is some information about GVWR vs AWR from Bob Raybuck Director of Technical Services NTEA.
โThereโs a common misconception that a truckโs GVWR is determined by adding gross axle weight ratings (GAWRs) together for all axles. Although this was a common way of calculating GVWR many years ago, itโs no longer an accurate method. The chassis manufacturer task of establishing a vehicle GVWR is much more difficult today due to advancement of safety system standards and how vehicles meet these requirements. This is why many trucks have a GVWR much lower than the combined axle ratings. It is not uncommon for a truck with a GVWR of 19,500 pounds to have a front axle rated at 7,500 pounds and a rear axle rated at 14,700 pounds. Safety standards that apply to braking, vehicle stability, and chassis manufacturer internal standards for durability, dynamic stability and handling can restrict GVWR even though the sum of the axle ratings exceeds 22,000 pounds. In this instance, the OEM set the GVWR at 19,500 pounds based on test results and vehicle dynamic performance to ensure a safe, reliable truck.โ
My truck has the same front axle, front suspension, rear axle, transmission, engine, and frame rating as a 3500 which is rated to handle more GVWR than 10k. The only major difference in ratings is the 500 less rear GAWR due to its coil suspension. So the truck itself can handle more GVWR than it my 2550 is rated and its weakest link is the rear suspension which has a greater GAWR than the F350 that ha a greater GVWR.
There are different requirements in the testing for class 2 and class 3 trucks for these safety standards. If you need a class 3 truck get one, Iโm not going to continue to play the โtell me what I want to hearโ game.
โJul-07-2018 04:53 AM
NRALIFR wrote:Old-Biscuit wrote:
And that is why I personally do NOT give a hoot about a mfgs GVWR or payload number which is based off of that mfgs GVWR
Me too neither.
My old 2010 F450 had a GVWR of 14,500, making it technically a class 4.
My new 2016 F450 has the same axles, brakes, wheels, tires, suspension, etc. Basically the same truck as the 2010, except for the engine and Diesel after-treatment requirements. Itโs GVWR is 14,000, which makes it a class 3.
They both haul(ed) my TC equally well, requiring the least amount of suspension mods (upper Stableloads) of any truck Iโve owned.
Lowering the GVWR of the 2016 was clearly for some reason other than what the truck can actually haul safely.
:):)
โJul-07-2018 03:22 AM
ShinerBock wrote:demiles wrote:
A single axle weight rating alone doesnโt necessarily dictate vehicle performance as a whole. Here is some information about GVWR vs AWR from Bob Raybuck Director of Technical Services NTEA.
โThereโs a common misconception that a truckโs GVWR is determined by adding gross axle weight ratings (GAWRs) together for all axles. Although this was a common way of calculating GVWR many years ago, itโs no longer an accurate method. The chassis manufacturer task of establishing a vehicle GVWR is much more difficult today due to advancement of safety system standards and how vehicles meet these requirements. This is why many trucks have a GVWR much lower than the combined axle ratings. It is not uncommon for a truck with a GVWR of 19,500 pounds to have a front axle rated at 7,500 pounds and a rear axle rated at 14,700 pounds. Safety standards that apply to braking, vehicle stability, and chassis manufacturer internal standards for durability, dynamic stability and handling can restrict GVWR even though the sum of the axle ratings exceeds 22,000 pounds. In this instance, the OEM set the GVWR at 19,500 pounds based on test results and vehicle dynamic performance to ensure a safe, reliable truck.โ
My truck has the same front axle, front suspension, rear axle, transmission, engine, and frame rating as a 3500 which is rated to handle more GVWR than 10k. The only major difference in ratings is the 500 less rear GAWR due to its coil suspension. So the truck itself can handle more GVWR than it my 2550 is rated and its weakest link is the rear suspension which has a greater GAWR than the F350 that ha a greater GVWR.
โJul-06-2018 09:17 PM
blofgren wrote:
You couldn't talk your dad out of buying a truck with a CP4?? :?:B
โJul-06-2018 08:57 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
Never said your statement was "a dig".
BTW... I've seen a few Shiner's on the 4th and will see a few more after our fishing trip tomorrow. :B
โJul-06-2018 08:56 PM
ShinerBock wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
I'm going to throw you a curve ball...
F350 SRW
Rear GAWR: 7,230
BTW... It's hard to believe you were looking at a new truck recently that has a build date of 7/16.
Never said it was from a new truck.
What I said in an earlier post was, most (not all) of the F350 that we looked at had this same rating which was why he ended up ordering one because he could not find an F350 with a 7,200 rear GAWR with the options and color he wanted. I can take a picture of me standing next his new F350 the next time I see him if you don't believe me. Can even hold up a sign saying "Yes Fish, this is Shiner".
Also, as I stated earlier too, this is not a dig on Ford but rather pointing out a truck that has less GAWR can have a higher GVWR and this was the only example I had.
โJul-06-2018 08:26 PM
ShinerBock wrote:FishOnOne wrote:
I'm going to throw you a curve ball...
F350 SRW
Rear GAWR: 7,230
BTW... It's hard to believe you were looking at a new truck recently that has a build date of 7/16.
Never said it was from a new truck.
What I said in an earlier post was, most (not all) of the F350 that we looked at had this same rating which was why he ended up ordering one because he could not find an F350 with a 7,200 rear GAWR with the options and color he wanted. I can take a picture of me standing next his new F350 the next time I see him if you don't believe me. Can even hold up a sign saying "Yes Fish, this is Shiner".
Also, as I stated earlier too, this is not a dig on Ford but rather pointing out a truck that has less GAWR can have a higher GVWR and this was the only example I had.
โJul-06-2018 07:18 PM
FishOnOne wrote:
I'm going to throw you a curve ball...
F350 SRW
Rear GAWR: 7,230
BTW... It's hard to believe you were looking at a new truck recently that has a build date of 7/16.
โJul-06-2018 06:54 PM
ShinerBock wrote:
Well I guess that everyone checked out of the thread where I posted this because no one seemed to answer it and the thread died shortly there after(unless no one had an answer). So here is to hoping that a new thread will get new looks and maybe an explanation.
Can someone explain this? This F350 has a lower front GAWR, lower rear GAWR, and lower combined GAWR yet has a higher GVWR than my 2500. Kind of goes along with what I have been saying about some(not all) class 2B(250/2500) diesel trucks are de-rated due EPA and federal max GVWR numbers of their class rather than their actual carrying ability, but I would love to hear anyone else's explanation or guess.
2017 F350
Front GAWR: 5,600
Rear GAWR: 6,340
Combined GAWR: 11,940
GVWR: 11,500
My 2014 Ram 2500
Front GAWR: 6,000
Rear GAWR: 6,500
Combined GAWR: 12,500
GVWR: 10,000
I can see how this GM 3500 got its 11,500 GVWR rating even though it has a lower front GAWR then mine. The Ram 3500 SRW has just about the same rating, but with a 6,000 front GAWR and a 7,000 rear GAWR.
2018 GM 3500
Front GAWR: 5,600
Rear GAWR: 7,050
Combined GAWR: 12,650
GVWR: 11,500