Too many choices
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โMar-09-2019 03:04 PM
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โMar-10-2019 05:24 AM
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โMar-09-2019 08:45 PM
robsb1234 wrote:
2014 F150 4x4 supercab 5.0L engine 3.55 axle ratio
Rated curb weight:5460#
GVWR:7350#
Payload: 1890#
GCW: 13500#
Max rated trailer weight:7800#
8000# e2 2 point sway control round bar weight distribution hitch
So, what do you think?
So if You're at 1000 tongue weight using the numbers above, you have 890# of payload left.
Subtract the weight of the people and pets that will be riding with you.
Subtract the weight of anything you carry in the cab or the bed of the truck. FOr me it's things like a cooler, extra propane tank, chairs, bikes or kayak's, table, cornhole boards, etc.
If you do the above and you still have a positive number left, your good and that is your safety margin. If your negative number, you need to get to a positive number by either eliminating weight or downsizing the camper to give you a better safety margin.
2019 Forest River Wolfpack 23pack15
Hope your travels are safe and the friendships made camping are lasting.
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โMar-09-2019 08:25 PM
It was the first trailer I bought brand new and I still get offers from total strangers to buy it from me! I just tell them, thank you, but not for sale...
Anyway, Good luck with it all.. I have looked at new travel trailers for the last 10 years or so and I always just walk away thinking "what a pos"....
Mitch
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โMar-09-2019 08:20 PM
Rated curb weight:5460#
GVWR:7350#
Payload: 1890#
GCW: 13500#
Max rated trailer weight:7800#
8000# e2 2 point sway control round bar weight distribution hitch
So, what do you think?
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โMar-09-2019 07:50 PM
robsb1234 wrote:
@trailer newbe So you're saying 5800# dry weight is too much for the truck. How heavy do you think it can go?
Itโs not so much what you can pull but rather how much can you carry. What is your truckโs payload rating and how much does the stuff and people you put in it weigh? The trailers you are looking at will have tongue weights from 800-1000lbs once loaded which will eat up a lot of your payload and not leave much for passengers.
'13 Keystone Bullet Premier 310BHPR
Hitched by Hensley
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โMar-09-2019 07:39 PM
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โMar-09-2019 07:23 PM
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โMar-09-2019 06:23 PM
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โMar-09-2019 06:00 PM
Good luck in whichever one you chose.
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โMar-09-2019 05:47 PM
2014 Voltage 3600 toy hauler
2019 RZR 1000XP TRE
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โMar-09-2019 04:19 PM
For starters consider how you intend to use it.
Boondocking? RV park with full hookups? Weekends mostly, or longer stays?
Longer stays, more dry camping means you need bigger tanks.
5800 and 6500 lbs are dry weights. With a half tank of water, propane and tanks, and a battery, (still no clothes dishes etc) You will be 6500 - 7000 lbs, with a 1000 lb tongue weight if you properly distribute the weight. Add the necessities and your probably between 7500 and 8000 lbs, is that the weight range you were looking for?
As to quality, you are about right, all are entry level, the Jayco could be either metal or glass sided, the other two are metal.
Appliances, equipment will be near identical, so look to fit and finish to distinguish the differences.
Pressboard is the cheapest cabinet and drawer material, plywood is better, hardwood is better still.
Staples are the fastest and weakest fasteners, brads are a little better, and screws are better still.
Pick the one that feels right to you and that fits your needs.
Then search online through
RV trader
and
rvt.com
using their advanced search, look up the exact model you want, and see how the prices vary.
Go to the dealers websites, and look for their terms. Some advertise low prices and then add thousands in hidden fees as well as trying to force you to use their preferred lenders. Others will price their product straight up, out the door. Make sure you are comparing apples to apples.
Good luck
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โMar-09-2019 03:26 PM