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Long and short of it

Dukec
Explorer
Explorer
Can you please give me the pros and cons of short and long bed 1 tons? I am looking at new trucks and shorts seem to be more prevalent. I pull a bumper pull travel trailer and don't know that I would ever change to a 5.
Thanks
17 REPLIES 17

gmw_photos
Explorer
Explorer
Me Again wrote:
goducks10 wrote:
Chicks dig long beds. ๐Ÿ™‚


Not when they have to drive them! Chris


LOL...."real girls" like 'em ! ๐Ÿ˜‰ My gals call the one ton long bed dually the "Kowgirl Kadillac". All the horsewomen I know love their big bad pickups.....:B

These are gals that can hitch 'em and back 'em with the best of them.

....ok, back to my corner....

transferred
Explorer
Explorer
Bob/Olallawa wrote:
6 1/2 ft. bed P/U is easier to turn around on narrow gravel roads and landings, and using the boat ramps or other tight areas. Extended cabs are better than four doors too but no choice now with GM anyway.


You mean with Ram? They are the ones who got rid of the QC which was basically an EC.

The only weird thing with GM trucks is you cannot get the ECSB in a one ton.
05 Ram 3500 SRW QCSB Laramie 4x4 Cummins, 610lbs, 23k GC, 9.9k GV
(totaled) 16 Ram 3500 SRW RCLB SLT 4X4 Cummins Aisin, 900lbs, 25.3k GC, 11.5k GV
06 F550 4x4 PSD, 570lbs, 33k GC, 19.5k GV

transferred
Explorer
Explorer
6 1/2 foot bed is definitely better for inner city use if it's a 6 seater. I love an 8' bed in my regular cab, but in my crew cab it's a 6 1/2 footer. You can hook up any modern 5er to either with the same ease.

Now the beds that are fricken useless are the 5 or 5 1/2 foot beds you can get in 1/2 ton trucks.
05 Ram 3500 SRW QCSB Laramie 4x4 Cummins, 610lbs, 23k GC, 9.9k GV
(totaled) 16 Ram 3500 SRW RCLB SLT 4X4 Cummins Aisin, 900lbs, 25.3k GC, 11.5k GV
06 F550 4x4 PSD, 570lbs, 33k GC, 19.5k GV

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
Bob/Olallawa wrote:
6 1/2 ft. bed P/U is easier to turn around on narrow gravel roads and landings, and using the boat ramps or other tight areas. Extended cabs are better than four doors too but no choice now with GM anyway.


??GM still makes a reg cab ext cab and crew cab.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5โ€ turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold

Bob_Olallawa
Explorer
Explorer
6 1/2 ft. bed P/U is easier to turn around on narrow gravel roads and landings, and using the boat ramps or other tight areas. Extended cabs are better than four doors too but no choice now with GM anyway.
Welcome to my home, that door you just broke down was there for your protection not mine.

wq93
Explorer
Explorer
Or another option for sheet goods is an inexpensive utility trailer which offers more room than the long bed. In 1995 when I switched from regular cab to crew cab pickups I decided the long bed resulted in too long of a vehicle for my use. At that time I found a nice utility trailer locally that was $100 less than what GMC wanted for the price difference from a 6.5 to 8 foot bed pickup. Since then I have owned nothing but 6.5' bed pickups.

For those few times I need to carry longer stuff (like 11 foot hardwood boards I use for woodworking) I just hitch up the trailer and the rest of the time I have a much easier to park pickup.

2012Coleman
Explorer II
Explorer II
No doubt a long bed holds more stuff - if you need it to hold lots of stuff. The plywood/pegboard/drywall issue is a moot point. You can either leave the tail gate down and use cargo straps to keep it from sliding out the back, or simply get something like pictured below - which is what I used to hall all the materials needed for a 12 X 16 foot shed that I built last year, using my little ole short box tundra.





Also, plenty of people haul 5th wheels with a short box.
Experience without good judgment is worthless; good judgment without experience is still good judgment!

2018 RAM 3500 Big Horn CTD
2018 Grand Design Reflection 303RLS

Me_Again
Explorer II
Explorer II
goducks10 wrote:
Chicks dig long beds. ๐Ÿ™‚


Not when they have to drive them! Chris
2021 F150 2.7 Ecoboost - Summer Home 2017 Bighorn 3575el. Can Am Spyder RT-L Chrome, Kawasaki KRX1000. Retired and enjoying it! RIP DW 07-05-2021

Dadoffourgirls
Explorer
Explorer
I spent 9 months with a 2017 Sierra 3500 Denali CC with 8 foot box. I learned where I could park. It was handy to keep my tool box in, and put a 6 foot livestock box. It was more difficult to back my trailer then a standard bed, and had to be more careful on the front of truck.
Dad of Four Girls
Wife
Employee of GM, all opinions are my own!
2017 Express Ext 3500 (Code named "BIGGER ED" by daughters)
2011 Jayco Jayflight G2 32BHDS

DutchmenSport
Explorer
Explorer
Dave H M wrote:
i don't get the continual comment on the sheet of plywood?

... :W


OK, I'll bite!


Mine is a long bed. Actually, the inside floor comfortably fits a 4x8 sheet of plywood laying flat between the fender wells, and I still have an inch left between the plywood and the tail gate.

Not only plywood, but 4x8 sheets of drywall, that lay FLAT on the floor. If they don't lay flat, and bounce when traveling, they break in half! 8 foot lengths of lumber no problem, and 10 foot lengths of lumber will fit corner to opposite corner without overhanging the tail gate.

Eight foot beds simply hold more stuff. With my configuration with the construction shell, the side panels have 2 enclosed shelves on each side. That hold a lot of small stuff, like electric cords, lumber for leveling the trailer, even our canoe supplies. I carry most of my extra tools in those side panels.

That leaves the bed of the truck for: A massive amount of fire wood, the blue sewer tote (35 gallon on wheels), a generator, an air compressor, a 7 foot step ladder, a 35 gallon extra water tank for when we do not have full hook-up, spare tire for the trailer, as the bumper is used for a cargo cage on the trailer, 2 different tool boxes, one exclusive for water connections, the other for tools exclusively for the camper, my trailer tongue platform, and sometimes our dog stroller.

It all fits, very well and very nice.

For me, I'd not have anything less than a long bed. In MY world, there IS more than camping I use the truck for. With the crew cab, 4 door, seating 6, the truck gets used when we have more than just the 2 of us traveling. It's roomier, inside and out.

I've not driving a short bed in a long while, but I do know, after owing 3 long bed duly's, the ride is stable as a rock! All 3 have towed marvelously. I've never had trailer sway, from an 18 foot trailer to my now 35 foot trailer. It pulls my 10 x 6 foot bed utility trailer like it doesn't even exist.

I can't say the longer wheel base helps eliminate bumps. Indiana has some pretty bad interstates, and especially when towing the trailer, these interstates simply beat us to death. We don't feel that in the car at all.

Basically, YOU have to decide which is right for you. I voted for "Bigger is better" and for me, it has been.

What are the cons? I don't have any. I've adjusted to long bed trucks so much, I don't see any down-side.

Face it ... try parking the family car at WallMart, and you still have to walk half a mile to the door because the parking lot is always packed!

No difference with the truck.

The only down side with my truck, NOT because is a long bed, but because it's a duly.... I can't get through my bank drive through to use the ATM, so I get out and walk up. And my duly won't go through automated car washes. I think that is the only down side. Length? Not a factor in my opinion.

It still boils down to the question you have to ask yourself: What do you use your truck for when NOT camping or towing? There's a balance between getting a vehicle that is a great tow vehicle, and something that you use with a purpose when not towing.

PDX_Zs
Explorer
Explorer
If you need a long bed, you will know it.

My work truck is a long bed. I need the room. It does work truck things. It carries bulk material; gravel, bark. It carries LOTS of construction supplies and tools. I am able to load it with lots of debris at one time. Short box doesn't cut it for what I need.

If I were just driving or towing or occasionally loading out, I would be into a short bed so fast.

goducks10
Explorer
Explorer
Chicks dig long beds. ๐Ÿ™‚

Dave_H_M
Explorer II
Explorer II
i don't get the continual comment on the sheet of plywood?

If and when I need a sheet of plywood i just leave the tail gate up slide the plywood and go.

Why would I have a long bed for the rare occasion that I would need to get s sheet of plywood?

Then we have the comment of the fuel tank. My short bed has like a 36 gal tank or something there abouts. It varies now a days.

i gotta go. :W

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
Pauljdav wrote:
con. Turning radius. Parking.
Pro. Larger gas tank. Storage.


Pretty much it.
Considering most truck are crew cabs now, wheelbase of a short bed is still long enough to drag any trailer around with the same authority as a long bed.
Personal preference mostly.
2016 Ram 2500, MotorOps.ca EFIlive tuned, 5โ€ turbo back, 6" lift on 37s
2017 Heartland Torque T29 - Sold.
Couple of Arctic Fox TCs - Sold