mgsulkis wrote:
Wow. I posted this near midnight and woke up to a lot of great replies. You folks move fast.
To summarize what I think I'm hearing:
1. 2100lbs dry doesn't mean much - I should plan on another 100lbs (I was already thinking this based on gear and up to four bodies in a what I hope to be a crew cab truck) - so I'm tracking there.
2. 2500-3500 trucks don't differ much in terms of hauling capacity or GVWR - maybe a couple hundred pounds in a lot of cases. I need to pay attention to the tires and wheels to ensure they are rated for the weight.
3. Pay attention to rear axle weight as the shortbed trucks with campers will carry most of the weight there.
I have been looking for used trucks in the 20-35k range to try to stay within my hoped for budget. There are definitely both Ford 350's and Ram 350 cummins in that range - though they tend to be pretty high mileage. (200k+) (and yup, I recognize that a diesel will run for 350k+ miles). I suppose that's just what it is.
Truth be told I wish I would have gotten a lighter camper - but being that I was buying on the used market and didn't have a lot of time (leaving for a trip in March) I still think the Lance 845 will serve me well. I'm just going to have a bigger truck than I was originally expecting.
Thanks all, and I'm very happy for any more tips on equipment/setup for someone unfamiliar and still learning. -Matt
1. Yes, another 1000lbs total (wet, full tanks, propane and gear/food/etc) is reasonable/realistic. I just emptied our camper out and three was probably 400lbs of dry foods, gear, bedding, camping gear etc. Add another couple hundred for water, full fridge, etc, you will definitely be over 500lbs of "stuff".
2. Correct, not alot of difference in hauling capacity, but the gvwrs are different by around 1500lbs. Same truck, different class rating. There are other nuances/options, gearing, but same chassis and overall strength. Any OEM wheels will be rated conservatively at 3500-3600lbs and all wheel sizes except 17s have many options for tires that meet or exceed that.
Using 7000-7200lbs as the lowest common denominator for real world ratings and most every shortbed HD pickup is 3000-3300lbs empty on the rear axle, gives you about 4000lbs total rear axle load addition before you start dipping into weights above whats rated.
You WILL want some sort of rear suspension enhancement on any 3/4 ton and most likely the similar on any srw 1 ton, just to a lesser extent.
3. Most ALL TCs carry all or most weight on the rear axle. Only significant weight going to front axle would be a short camper like yours on a longbed truck. Which is also a great option.
You don't "need" a diesel unless you're doing much more than hauling a little camper around and will net a nicer lower mile truck overall at basically the expense of fuel mileage. (Without getting into the gas vs diesel debate, lol)
And you couldn't really get "much" lighter of a camper without going to a low optioned pop up (even the nice popups are about the same dry weight) or a very minimalistic appointed rig, which IMO defeats the purpose of having a camper greatly.
Setup is easy. Find truck, add tie downs, rubber bed mat and air bags or whatever (you can test to see what you need for suspension if anything) and a pigtail to plug it in.
You don't need to spend the big bucks on torklift tiedown mounts and automatic tiedowns. Cost vs convenience there.
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