Jun-21-2017 06:29 PM
Jun-27-2017 02:39 PM
Jun-26-2017 03:30 AM
stevemorris wrote:
who travels with gallons and gallons or is that liters(or litres) in the tanks?
there's a couple of hundred pounds. we travel long distances with all tanks bone dry, even the water heater
Jun-25-2017 08:52 PM
Downwindtracker2 wrote:
Hey, we got WiFi,again. The Cabot trail tomorrow. When ORV built our TT,they built it light like a Sherman tank is built light.It's got a double frame, so no problems there. Newer years of the model are lighter.
My buddy John said " Before I met Jennifer, the fridge had room for both beer and food, now I use a cooler for the beer." I find it's a bother always buying ice,chuckle.
My guess is most wives are not minimalists, so that fully loaded weight is not too far off average.
Jun-25-2017 03:49 PM
Jun-25-2017 07:08 AM
And since most NEVER scale their TTs, they really have non idea how much weight they have actually added.
Jun-24-2017 07:38 AM
Jun-23-2017 06:20 PM
Jun-23-2017 04:54 PM
SoundGuy wrote:Different people have different needs.Downwindtracker2 wrote:
Canadians use both , and can convert.
Not me, I never refer to anything in kg, nor would I ever refer to fuel mileage rated in Imperial gallons or even litres per 100 km, the stupidest form of metric measure. rv.net is a US based forum with the vast majority of members being Americans, it only makes sense to use US measure, whether volume, weight, whatever. :R
That said, what's the point of your original post? - I've yet to see any trailer where it's actual stickered dry weight won't be noticeably higher than it's listed brochure weight - big surprise. What is surprising is how just 2 adults could find it necessary to load so much additional weight into the trailer, making the end result far heavier than it really needs to be. :E
Jun-23-2017 02:05 PM
coolmom42 wrote:Downwindtracker2 wrote:
When guys and gals are looking at purchasing a TT,they look at the brochure . But to get an idea of reality, our brochure weight dry was 4100#, the factory out the door sticker was 4600# dry ,when I ran it over the scale,fully loaded for an across Canada trip,the two axles were 2830 kg.(2.2lb=1kg).
This is all a so what to me, I switched out the axles to 5200# and the tires to either 2700# or 2900# truck, 16" 10plys .And I pull with a diesel 1ton. But someone with a 1/2 ton, might not have a so what attitude driving down the road.
This is 6226 lb loaded. Which means you are carrying a LOT of stuff---1626 lb. Unless that is batteries and water... I can't imagine where in a TT you would put that much weight.
Jun-23-2017 12:33 PM
moresmoke wrote:stevemorris wrote:
who travels with gallons and gallons or is that liters(or litres) in the tanks?
there's a couple of hundred pounds. we travel long distances with all tanks bone dry, even the water heater
Try camping somewhere you can't drink the water. We always leave home with the fresh tank full.
Jun-23-2017 12:13 PM
stevemorris wrote:
who travels with gallons and gallons or is that liters(or litres) in the tanks?
there's a couple of hundred pounds. we travel long distances with all tanks bone dry, even the water heater
Jun-23-2017 11:24 AM
Jun-22-2017 02:35 PM
Jun-22-2017 12:56 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:Hannibal wrote:
I didn't realize how much stuff we carried until we unloaded our previous 5th wheel onto the carport so we could deliver it to the dealership to trade for our current TT. Easily several hundred pounds.
Our currency here in the US is metric. I don't know why we still use thumbs and feet for everything else.
Sorry but NO........
Since 1786 US Currency uses decimal monetary systems (1 dollar =100 cents)
Most ALL nations use it NOW
British System of pounds, shillings, and pence is not used by many any more....