If you find one more fact for your vehicle, you can figure out any fifth wheel for towing using two math formulas.
But you MUST know what the Gross Combined Vehicle Weight Rating (GCVWR) for that truck is.
Oh, and you also MUST weigh your truck, to see how much payload you have remaining before hitting that GVWR of 8,800 pounds.
On fifth wheels, how much your truck can CARRY is always the limiting factor. This is the pin weight of the fifth wheel, plus say add 150 pounds for the hitch you install, plus weight of two 150 pound passengers.
Anyway, the math formulas:
Once you've weighed your truck, then you can PULL this heavy a fifth wheel:
GCVWR - actual vehicle weight = max weight fifth wheel you can pull.
And carry this pin weight:
GVWR - actual vehicle weight = max pin weight fifth wheel (also included hitch, passengers in vehicle here so there's 300 pounds for two people and hitch)
So for giggles, let us assume here your truck weighs 6890 pounds and has a GCVWR of 20,000 pounds
20,000 - 6890 = 13,110 pounds max fifth wheel weight.
8800 - 6890 = 1,910 pounds max hitch weight. Take off 300 pounds for passengers and hitch, and you're down to 1,610 pound hitch weight.
NOTE: the above numbers are figments of my imagination, just shown to illustrate how the formulas work. Your actual correct numbers may vary greatly from this.
Get those numbers, and plug them into the formulas. Then you WILL know what your vehicle can handle.
The Mad Norsky, Doll, Logan and Rocky
2014 Ram 3500 w/ Cummins/Aisin
2019 Northern Lite 10-2 EX CD LE Wet Bath
RV'ing since 1991
I took the road less traveled .....Now I'm Lost!