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Tires & wheels for towing

Herzog
Explorer
Explorer
I have a 2016 Ram 2500 with 275/70/18 tires mounted on factory 8" wide wheels....I hate the wheels.

I've been looking at several aftermarket wheels that I would like, but they are all 18x9". I have the crappy Firestone Transforce tires that only have 3400 miles on them, so I am not ready to buy new ones.

I was going to re-mount the tires on the new 9" wide rims, but a tire store guy said that it would be ok only if I wasn't pulling a 5th wheel.

I asked a couple of other, and they said all would be good.

Of course, I do not want any issues on the hiway pulling our 8,000 pound 5th wheel.

Sooo, I would like any/all advice you all might have regarding this swap...yes, it's all good OR no, you will die on the road!!

Anyone have this combination without problems??

Thanks
28 REPLIES 28

Grit_dog
Navigator
Navigator
What Ida d said.
Never seen a 8lug aftermarket rim rated less than 3klb either.
For what you're doing, most any rim will fit the bill. 8k fiver is not a lot of pin weight.
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

zogg
Explorer
Explorer
jus2shy wrote:
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?

Many of the bling rims have a 2000-2500 lb rating which is just fine for a grocery getter but outright dangerous for someone that carries maximum weight in their bed or tows a FW with a heavy pin weight.


So what you/they are saying these wheels are useless for any type of towing or load carrying. Then for everyone in this forum my thought would be, did you buy the truck to do a job or did you really what a grocery hauler?

My point being is, if you are limited to 2500 lbs.,the whole purpose of owning a truck is useless for what the truck is design to do. It's kind of like the young guys that pay for a diesel only to put oversized tires on it to go "muddin". I must be getting old. I just don't get it.

It gets even worse. My F250 PSD was 4500 lbs on the front axle before I loaded it up. Many of these aftermarket rims are overloaded with an empty truck and no driver or passengers...


Yep, plenty of "Bro-Dozers" out there. Impractical Lift, huge rims with extremely low profile off-road tires, etc... Some people love trucks for the status, size and looks; therefore they modify to such standards. Some buy trucks for practicality and build to suit their standards. That's America.

Heck, I think trucks are just as much a status symbol now a days as a BMW in the 80's and 90's. That's why such super-high-end trims as "Platinum", "Platinum-Reserve", "1892 Edition", "Longhorn Laramie" (etc...) all exist.


You are probably doing it the right way. Stay with factory wheels and no worries. I do like yours. Thanks
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
2016 Ram 2500 Crew Cab
6.4 Hemi, 4x4, 3.73, 6 Speed Auto
2016 Keystone Hideout 7500# Dry :B

jus2shy
Explorer
Explorer
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?

Many of the bling rims have a 2000-2500 lb rating which is just fine for a grocery getter but outright dangerous for someone that carries maximum weight in their bed or tows a FW with a heavy pin weight.


So what you/they are saying these wheels are useless for any type of towing or load carrying. Then for everyone in this forum my thought would be, did you buy the truck to do a job or did you really what a grocery hauler?

My point being is, if you are limited to 2500 lbs.,the whole purpose of owning a truck is useless for what the truck is design to do. It's kind of like the young guys that pay for a diesel only to put oversized tires on it to go "muddin". I must be getting old. I just don't get it.

It gets even worse. My F250 PSD was 4500 lbs on the front axle before I loaded it up. Many of these aftermarket rims are overloaded with an empty truck and no driver or passengers...


Yep, plenty of "Bro-Dozers" out there. Impractical Lift, huge rims with extremely low profile off-road tires, etc... Some people love trucks for the status, size and looks; therefore they modify to such standards. Some buy trucks for practicality and build to suit their standards. That's America.

Heck, I think trucks are just as much a status symbol now a days as a BMW in the 80's and 90's. That's why such super-high-end trims as "Platinum", "Platinum-Reserve", "1892 Edition", "Longhorn Laramie" (etc...) all exist.
E'Aho L'ua
2013 RAM 3500 Crew Cab 4x4 SRW |Cummins @ 370/800| 68RFE| 3.42 gears
Currently Rig-less (still shopping and biding my time)

Me_Again
Explorer II
Explorer II
I think the Laramie wheels are really nice looking. Best looking of all the RAM wheel options.

Maybe you can find a set of take offs. 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

Bedlam
Moderator
Moderator
vonzoog wrote:
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?

Many of the bling rims have a 2000-2500 lb rating which is just fine for a grocery getter but outright dangerous for someone that carries maximum weight in their bed or tows a FW with a heavy pin weight.


So what you/they are saying these wheels are useless for any type of towing or load carrying. Then for everyone in this forum my thought would be, did you buy the truck to do a job or did you really what a grocery hauler?

My point being is, if you are limited to 2500 lbs.,the whole purpose of owning a truck is useless for what the truck is design to do. It's kind of like the young guys that pay for a diesel only to put oversized tires on it to go "muddin". I must be getting old. I just don't get it.

It gets even worse. My F250 PSD was 4500 lbs on the front axle before I loaded it up. Many of these aftermarket rims are overloaded with an empty truck and no driver or passengers...

Host Mammoth 11.5 on Ram 5500 HD

IdaD
Explorer
Explorer
FWIW, I checked several 18" options on Discount Tire and the ratings varied from 3400 to 3650 lbs per wheel. My and OP's tire rating is 3640 lbs each (275/70R18). I would definitely not get a wheel rated for less than the tires.
2015 Cummins Ram 4wd CC/SB

vonzoog
Explorer
Explorer
Bedlam wrote:
vonzoog wrote:
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?

Many of the bling rims have a 2000-2500 lb rating which is just fine for a grocery getter but outright dangerous for someone that carries maximum weight in their bed or tows a FW with a heavy pin weight.


So what you/they are saying these wheels are useless for any type of towing or load carrying. Then for everyone in this forum my thought would be, did you buy the truck to do a job or did you really what a grocery hauler?

My point being is, if you are limited to 2500 lbs.,the whole purpose of owning a truck is useless for what the truck is design to do. It's kind of like the young guys that pay for a diesel only to put oversized tires on it to go "muddin". I must be getting old. I just don't get it.
If you have to ask why I drive a Diesel, then you will never understand.

2016 Ram 3500 DRW
Cummins(370/800) 68RE Auto 3.73 Rear
2018 Momentum 376TH

Bedlam
Moderator
Moderator
vonzoog wrote:
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?

Many of the bling rims have a 2000-2500 lb rating which is just fine for a grocery getter but outright dangerous for someone that carries maximum weight in their bed or tows a FW with a heavy pin weight.

Host Mammoth 11.5 on Ram 5500 HD

IdaD
Explorer
Explorer
Discount Tire appears to have weight ratings for most of their wheels listed on their website.
2015 Cummins Ram 4wd CC/SB

vonzoog
Explorer
Explorer
OK I'll bite. What in the world does towing a fifth wiheel have to do with the weight rating. Loading 6000 pounds in the bed or putting 3000 pounds of fifth wheel in the bed, what in the world is the difference? Maybe I just totally don't understand. Would someone please explain?
If you have to ask why I drive a Diesel, then you will never understand.

2016 Ram 3500 DRW
Cummins(370/800) 68RE Auto 3.73 Rear
2018 Momentum 376TH

goducks10
Explorer
Explorer
When I went shopping for new rims and tires for my 12 Ram 2500 CTD I found out some interesting things. Like mentioned some of the nicer looking rims aren't strong enough. I went to Discount Tire and worked with one of the sales guys. He got out a book and we both looked thru for some rims. I was going from 245/70/17 to 275/65/18. I found a few rims I liked and had already told him I tow a 5th wheel. On every rim I was interested in he called the rim MFG and asked about towing with them. One MFG actually said no if I was towing a 5th wheel. Long story short I finally found some that worked. So even though the rim has the load rating it's possible it may not be recommended for 5th wheel towing.
Sad but true story, I went to Les Schwab before and briefly talked about rims and tires. Some don't have load rating info on them so when I asked the LS sales guy he said don't worry about it, that if they have 8 lugs then they'll be fine. So not true.

Bedlam
Moderator
Moderator
A 275mm tread width is almost 11". It is fine on a 9" wide rim. I will warn you that many aftermarket rims are for bling and and are not forged or rated as high as your OEM models. Have you considered going to a 245/70R19.5 tire on a 19.5" Vision or Rickson rim? These are the same height as your OEM's but much better at weight handling (4500+ lb rating per wheel).

Host Mammoth 11.5 on Ram 5500 HD

IdaD
Explorer
Explorer
Following. I haven't shopped new wheels yet but I'm planning on swapping out the factory for aftermarket when I get new tires later this year. I've got the same crappy Firestones on my truck and with just under 25,000 they're getting pretty worn down.
2015 Cummins Ram 4wd CC/SB