โNov-30-2018 05:10 AM
โOct-21-2019 10:13 AM
โJan-08-2019 10:04 AM
โJan-08-2019 08:22 AM
โJan-08-2019 07:55 AM
โJan-08-2019 06:56 AM
emcvay wrote:
Semantics. You're assuming the sticker is finite and nothing can change it.
โJan-08-2019 05:53 AM
โJan-08-2019 05:22 AM
RCW 46.44.041
Maximum gross weightsโWheelbase and axle factors.
No vehicle or combination of vehicles shall operate upon the public highways of this state with a gross load on any single axle in excess of twenty thousand pounds, or upon any group of axles in excess of that set forth in the following table, except that two consecutive sets of tandem axles may carry a gross load of thirty-four thousand pounds each, if the overall distance between the first and last axles of such consecutive sets of tandem axles is thirty-six feet or more.
โJan-08-2019 05:21 AM
RCW 46.44.042
Maximum gross weightsโAxle and tire factors.
Subject to the maximum gross weights specified in RCW 46.44.041, it is unlawful to operate any vehicle upon the public highways with a gross weight, including load, upon any tire concentrated upon the surface of the highway in excess of six hundred pounds per inch width of such tire. An axle manufactured after July 31, 1993, carrying more than ten thousand pounds gross weight must be equipped with four or more tires. An axle carrying more than ten thousand pounds gross weight must have four or more tires, regardless of date of manufacture. Instead of the four or more tires per axle requirements of this section, an axle may be equipped with two tires limited to five hundred pounds per inch width of tire. This section does not apply to vehicles operating under oversize or overweight permits, or both, issued under RCW 46.44.090, while carrying a nonreducible load.
The following equipment may operate at six hundred pounds per inch width of tire: (1) A nonliftable steering axle or axles on the power unit; (2) a tiller axle on firefighting apparatus; (3) a rear booster trailing axle equipped with two tires on a ready-mix concrete transit truck; and (4) a straddle trailer manufactured before January 1, 1996, equipped with single-tire axles or a single axle using a walking beam supported by two in-line single tires and used exclusively for the transport of fruit bins between field, storage, and processing. A straddle trailer manufactured after January 1, 1996, meeting this use criteria may carry five hundred fifteen pounds per inch width of tire on sixteen and one-half inch wide tires.
For the purpose of this section, the width of tire in case of solid rubber or hollow center cushion tires, so long as the use thereof may be permitted by the law, shall be measured between the flanges of the rim. For the purpose of this section, the width of tires in case of pneumatic tires shall be the maximum overall normal inflated width as stipulated by the manufacturer when inflated to the pressure specified and without load thereon.
The department of transportation, by rule with respect to state highways, and a local authority, with respect to a public highway under its jurisdiction, may extend the weight table in RCW 46.44.041 to one hundred fifteen thousand pounds. However, the extension must be in compliance with federal law, and vehicles operating under the extension must be in full compliance with the 1997 axle and tire requirements under this section.
โJan-08-2019 05:17 AM
jimh425 wrote:mk10108 wrote:
Can you handle the truth? ... Only adding springs will increase your payload.
Can you? Nope, they don't increase payload. That's a fixed number. GVWR-GVW.
โJan-07-2019 03:30 PM
Sliding-into-home wrote:
That said, I'm right at the upper gvwr limit and would like to see if stable loads would improve the handling vs stock.
โJan-07-2019 02:36 PM
mk10108 wrote:
Can you handle the truth? ... Only adding springs will increase your payload.
โJan-07-2019 02:15 PM
โJan-07-2019 02:05 PM
โJan-06-2019 06:09 PM
Sliding-into-home wrote:If it is the upper stable loads, I'm guessing this issue won't crop up on our Ram 3500 SRW since it doesn't have overload springs. Hope Torklift gets you all squared away.
I don't think it's the truck/camper combo. I think the camper is simply too light for upper stable loads. I've been working with torklift (who has been very helpful) to get a better solution in place and will report back when I finally get around to installing.
Anyway, I doubt you can go wrong, plus you get the built in generator space with the short bed. I use my generator every weekend and taking it in and out in the snow is mildly annoying.
โJan-06-2019 04:56 PM