โJan-19-2017 06:13 AM
โJan-23-2017 05:28 AM
falconbrother wrote:
Every Christmas we take two weeks to visit family at the coast and travel down the coast. This year we spent a few days in Myrtle Beach. We were cruzing around the campground and I saw at least two people pulling what I consider to be big fifth wheels with F-150s. Not being critical but, it did cause me to wonder. Most people were pulling the same sized fivers with diesel trucks. What's reasonable and what's overkill?
โJan-23-2017 04:10 AM
blt2ski wrote:JIMNLIN wrote:
These 1/2 ton truck " look what I saw " threads are a hoot especially when a F150 is involved.
F150 GVWR run from 6xxx gvwr up to 8200 gvwr.
And 3xxx rawr on up to 4800 rawr.
And gvwr based payloads into the low 3xxx lb range.
We need a special forum for "look what I saw" threads that offers no weight numbers other than "must be" or a "good size" or its gotta' be overloaded just because.....with Marty as the mod.
Bad enough getting threads like this every few months, or multiple a month.......but to have ONE thread! heaven help me!
Oh for you RV.NET weight police! The REAL weight police in typically white pickups or vans, and in weigh stations on the interstate. DO NOT give one flying rats asset about the manufactures warranty weight rating inside you door! ALL they care about is you are under the engineer designed weight limits of the ROAD BED/BRIDGE DECK itself. That is the lessor of 500 lbs per inch width of tire or 20K per single axel, or 34K per tandem.
Using this example, MOST SW pickups have 4 10" tires, or 5000 lbs per tire or a total of 20K lbs they can put on the road before you are damaging the road bed.....THAT is ALL that a real weight cop worries about. Also as long as your paid for license is above what you weigh! Even if you are under the load limits, be above paid for limit, depending upon how much over. The LEO may just give you a 10day up your registered license weight by 2000 lbs as has happened to me a few times! That was 150% of my manufactures gvwr, and 130% of axel totals!
With that in mind. Ask yourself this......is the OPs example truly overweight per an LEO/CVEO? Oh and a ticket for being over weight is a no moving ticket, does not follow your driving record etc. Its an additional TAX to cover the damage you are doing to the road bed!
Now if the OPs example were to get field tested on its braking ability, and it fails....NOW THAT is a moving violation, follows the drivers record, and will get the vehicle red tagged, and OFF the road until the brakes are fixed! In this case, said F150 will probably not get fixed enough to make the grade. So the owner will have to show up with a better equiped tow rig!
More than one way to skin a cat at this game!
Marty
โJan-22-2017 07:31 PM
โJan-22-2017 02:07 PM
Hannibal wrote:
We were rolling down I-10 a few years ago with cruise set on 65mph when along comes a Tundra towing a HT towable 5th wheel about 28-30 ft long. They eased on past us slow pokes and disappeared over the hills.
โJan-22-2017 01:49 PM
Camper G wrote:Hannibal wrote:
We were rolling down I-10 a few years ago with cruise set on 65mph when along comes a Tundra towing a HT towable 5th wheel about 28-30 ft long. They eased on past us slow pokes and disappeared over the hills.
Wow, that's crazy. It was probably wearibg ST trailer tires too. Those are the ones you you see rolled over on their side or half the side of the camper torn off because a tire overheated and blew out. Tires can fail for any reason, but I'm not going to press my luck by exceeding the speed rating. Ignorance is bliss for some folks.
โJan-22-2017 01:17 PM
Hannibal wrote:
We were rolling down I-10 a few years ago with cruise set on 65mph when along comes a Tundra towing a HT towable 5th wheel about 28-30 ft long. They eased on past us slow pokes and disappeared over the hills.
โJan-22-2017 10:14 AM
โJan-22-2017 08:21 AM
bucky wrote:
Minimum speeds are great until you get creamed by somebody that isn't expecting a rusted out S10 running 40in the middle lane in a 75 mph zone. Legal yes, smart no.
โJan-22-2017 02:45 AM
โJan-21-2017 05:31 PM
The_real_wild1 wrote:
I find it funny when some people say they have no problems towing. I wonder if the people towing up a hill in a 100km/h zone holding traffic back in their sacked out 1/2t doing 40 say they have no issues towing??
โJan-21-2017 07:52 AM
โJan-21-2017 05:40 AM
โJan-20-2017 08:06 PM
JIMNLIN wrote:
These 1/2 ton truck " look what I saw " threads are a hoot especially when a F150 is involved.
F150 GVWR run from 6xxx gvwr up to 8200 gvwr.
And 3xxx rawr on up to 4800 rawr.
And gvwr based payloads into the low 3xxx lb range.
We need a special forum for "look what I saw" threads that offers no weight numbers other than "must be" or a "good size" or its gotta' be overloaded just because.....with Marty as the mod.
โJan-20-2017 07:51 AM
mkirsch wrote:
Hey you anti-weight-police types... I see most if not all of you are driving 2500 or 3500 class trucks... Put your money where your mouth is and get yourself a half ton.
โJan-20-2017 07:34 AM
JIMNLIN wrote:
These 1/2 ton truck " look what I saw " threads are a hoot especially when a F150 is involved.
F150 GVWR run from 6xxx gvwr up to 8200 gvwr.
And 3xxx rawr on up to 4800 rawr.
And gvwr based payloads into the low 3xxx lb range.
We need a special forum for "look what I saw" threads that offers no weight numbers other than "must be" or a "good size" or its gotta' be overloaded just because.....with Marty as the mod.