Nov-19-2017 03:38 PM
Nov-26-2017 11:26 AM
Nov-26-2017 11:00 AM
burningman wrote:transamz9 wrote:
If you want to feel real stability in a 3500 go get you a cab chassis and tow with it. Same tires as your truck but twice the spring.
You can easily put any springs in any truck.
Cab & chassis trucks have narrower rear axles.
Nov-26-2017 07:49 AM
transamz9 wrote:
If you want to feel real stability in a 3500 go get you a cab chassis and tow with it. Same tires as your truck but twice the spring.
Nov-24-2017 09:13 AM
Nov-23-2017 04:24 AM
transamz9 wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
I think people in the market trying to decide between a SRW and DRW really should listen a bit more to those who actually own a DRW.
I have towed in some bad AZZ winds hitting on the side and at an angle even towing 75 mph, I never felt unstable or unsafe. My combined is 33K.
Also my DRV is 13' 5" high and almost 102" wide.
Some of us srw truck owners have and do own both. There are plusses and minutes to both. If a trailer is within a srw rating then the srw handles it just fine. I have never felt unstable in any of my srw trucks either. If you want to feel real stability in a 3500 go get you a cab chassis and tow with it. Same tires as your truck but twice the spring.
Nov-23-2017 04:23 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
I think people in the market trying to decide between a SRW and DRW really should listen a bit more to those who actually own a DRW.
I have towed in some bad AZZ winds hitting on the side and at an angle even towing 75 mph, I never felt unstable or unsafe. My combined is 33K.
Also my DRV is 13' 5" high and almost 102" wide.
Nov-23-2017 01:19 AM
Bedlam wrote:Space is one of the potential problems I was thinking of.
19.5’s typically fit in the same space as the OEM spare. 225 width usually has a 4000 lb LRG PR14 rating at 32” tall and 245’s are rated at 4500-5000 lbs each at 33” tall. My 245/70R19.5 tires were the same height as my 275/70R18 tires.
Nov-22-2017 06:36 PM
Nov-22-2017 05:11 PM
Nov-22-2017 04:44 PM
Nov-22-2017 10:51 AM
TakingThe5th wrote:4x4ord wrote:TakingThe5th wrote:4x4ord wrote:TakingThe5th wrote:
Two days ago I was driving the interstate solo in my DRV. It seemed like it might be windy because cars were being blown around and grass and trash and SRVs were also blowing in the crosswinds. I've had the same experience lashed to the 5er. Really a nice ride! So if a new SRV can perform the same as my 'ol DRV - just think how well a new DRV must handle.
Why would the wind blow a SRW truck around more than a DRW truck? I would expect it to be the other way around.
Confused! Why would you expect a truck with a wider stance and more rubber on the ground to blow around more then a lighter truck with roughly the same profile? In any event, I've owned and driven both and I enjoy the DRV for it's better stability.
In actual fact I don't really expect there to be a lot of difference between how the wind affects a dually vs a srw but I try to imagine what is happening when a cross wind hits a truck. If the tires slip a little on the pavement, I would expect the srw to resist slippage better.....such as srw vs drw on an icy surface. If the wondering effect is due to sidewall flex or soft suspension than maybe a dually would do better.
4x4-If I’ve read your post correctly (my apologies if not) you claim that your expectations and imaginations are actual facts. “In actual fact I don't really expect there to be a lot of difference between how the wind affects a dually vs a srw but I try to imagine ...”. Just to be clear, I’m not imagining or postulating anything when saying that my DRW outperforms my SRW. These are real driving experiences with real trucks which sometimes tow real things behind them.
Nov-22-2017 10:28 AM
Nov-22-2017 10:12 AM
4x4ord wrote:TakingThe5th wrote:4x4ord wrote:TakingThe5th wrote:
Two days ago I was driving the interstate solo in my DRV. It seemed like it might be windy because cars were being blown around and grass and trash and SRVs were also blowing in the crosswinds. I've had the same experience lashed to the 5er. Really a nice ride! So if a new SRV can perform the same as my 'ol DRV - just think how well a new DRV must handle.
Why would the wind blow a SRW truck around more than a DRW truck? I would expect it to be the other way around.
Confused! Why would you expect a truck with a wider stance and more rubber on the ground to blow around more then a lighter truck with roughly the same profile? In any event, I've owned and driven both and I enjoy the DRV for it's better stability.
In actual fact I don't really expect there to be a lot of difference between how the wind affects a dually vs a srw but I try to imagine what is happening when a cross wind hits a truck. If the tires slip a little on the pavement, I would expect the srw to resist slippage better.....such as srw vs drw on an icy surface. If the wondering effect is due to sidewall flex or soft suspension than maybe a dually would do better.
Nov-22-2017 09:57 AM
Nov-22-2017 09:06 AM