Kodiak02 wrote:
Any opinions on the Lance 825?
825 is too heavy for your truck, especially if you want to tow as well.
This is the problem with an F150. Generally speaking they only have about a 1500lb useful payload capacity, which includes the camper, supplies, passengers, and trailer tongue. The DRY Lance 825 far exceeds the payload capacity of the typical F150 by hundreds of pounds, BEFORE you get in the driver's seat, put a drop of water in the tank, add a crumb of food to the refrigerator, or hang a t-shirt in the wardrobe.
A late model F150 will have a yellow sticker on the driver's door or driver's door frame stating the maximum payload capacity.
There are things you can do to the truck to arguably "increase" the payload capacity, but at the end of the day you still might not be happy with how it handles once the newness wears off. Then you've thrown good money after bad and STILL have to choose whether you want to take a huge loss trading trucks or take a huge loss selling the camper and giving up.
People do it and are happy. Others do it and end up trading trucks. It's somewhat a matter of your personal tastes, your ability to tolerate/ignore less-than-ideal driving qualities, and your willingness to take risk.
The closer you are to being "within the ratings" the better chance you will have of being happy with what you bought once that newness factor wears off. Wasting money is no fun.
Unfortunately, there are NO fully self contained campers light enough for a typical F150 that will keep you under the rated payload capacity. Popups are not much, if any, lighter than the hard-sided campers. The only thing that might prove light enough is a very sparse popup camper from a company called "Four Wheel Campers" but even then you will be right at or a bit over the payload with the trailer in tow.
Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.