Jan-25-2014 01:44 AM
Jan-27-2014 08:53 AM
Jan-27-2014 08:39 AM
Jan-27-2014 08:37 AM
Jan-27-2014 07:23 AM
Jan-27-2014 06:50 AM
Dog Folks wrote:TomG2 wrote:
Four pages and people are still giving advice without knowing the payload capacity of the tow vehicle. Maybe I missed it.
Don't need to actually walk out in front of a bus to know it is not a good idea.
According to Ford, the latest (2014) and best towing capacity for any F-150 is just over 11,000. Most recommendations are under 9,000.
Payload capacity or not, the vehicle is way over towing capability.
As other posts have mentioned, it is not if the truck can pull it but if the truck stop it. Just because it can, doesn't mean it should.
Jan-27-2014 06:33 AM
Dog Folks wrote:TomG2 wrote:
Four pages and people are still giving advice without knowing the payload capacity of the tow vehicle. Maybe I missed it.
Don't need to actually walk out in front of a bus to know it is not a good idea.
According to Ford, the latest (2014) and best towing capacity for any F-150 is just over 11,000. Most recommendations are under 9,000.
Payload capacity or not, the vehicle is way over towing capability.
As other posts have mentioned, it is not if the truck can pull it but if the truck stop it. Just because it can, doesn't mean it should.
Jan-27-2014 06:13 AM
TomG2 wrote:
Four pages and people are still giving advice without knowing the payload capacity of the tow vehicle. Maybe I missed it.
Jan-27-2014 05:05 AM
Jan-26-2014 08:35 PM
Jan-26-2014 06:04 PM
Jan-26-2014 05:20 PM
Jan-26-2014 05:12 PM
Jan-26-2014 04:39 PM
rdhetrick wrote:
Here's a situation that's sure to get mixed responses:
Usually the "weight police" show up at these discussions. But today we have the weight clowns. A man can't help but smile at the imaginative descriptions. :B
I'm in a situation where I will likely be living in my trailer for several years. I currently have a 30ish foot travel trailer and a F150. Something I'm considering is getting a 5th wheel for the extra room and layout benefits.
I'll be parking this trailer more or less permanently.
So here's my question, will the F150 be able to get a 12000 lb 5th wheel a few hundred miles from the place I buy it to my site? I don't want to buy a new truck for a one time event.
I know it's overweight, and I know it will probably be a miserable hundred miles, but will the tires pop or axle break?
In reality, a F-150 could do it but the years of 150 specs vary widely. Whatcha got?
Tires are the main concern and they may not take an overload above that printed on their side, especially in hot weather. Wanna buy heavy duty tires right before selling it? Better look first.
If you have a mid '90's truck, it may have the 8.8" differential. These axles are Ford's equivalent of the GM 12-bolt and the wimpy bearings ride right on the axles. That long of trip with near double the weight of the safe might wear pretty fast. The axles probably won't bend unless you hit a big bump. If the truck has the newer 9+ inch rear gears with semi-floating axles and bigger bearings, I believe the axle would bear it no problem.
With an extra 1000#, the rig will probably look like the one pappcam described with headlights skyward. Overload springs are kind of a big investment for a truck you are about to sell. But it may not matter... you don't need overloads if the truck pappcam saw had traveled over a 1000 miles without them, you can do it for a few hundred, especially if you drive in daylight as to not blind oncoming traffic.
Finally the price of the hitch doesn't matter since it will go on your new truck. But you will have to install it twice.
No way would I install one twice. I'd beg, borrow or steal a bigger truck with a hitch already in it first.
I know I could hire someone to move it, and that's a possibility, but I'm just trying to figure out what is possible and what is not.
By the way, I just moved a 1500 lb safe in the truck and it took it without problem.
What say you: will it move the 5th wheel or pancake my truck?
Nah, it won't pancake the truck unless you hit a big bump. The truck is designed to safely hit bumps with less weight, easily the inertial equivalent to the static weight of the 5vr hitch. But it won't stand over, say, 2 G's with a ton and a half pin weight bouncing in it. Drive careful.
Jan-25-2014 08:38 PM