โNov-13-2018 01:06 AM
โNov-14-2018 03:38 PM
โNov-14-2018 10:15 AM
HMS Beagle wrote:
All RVs should carry a consumer warning sticker on the door which says, "CAUTION: The weights claimed in any of the manufacturer's literature are unreliable, and actual weights are likely to se substantially higher."
This has been true of every RV I have purchased.
โNov-14-2018 07:15 AM
โNov-14-2018 07:15 AM
bwlyon wrote:
https://www.rv.net/forum/index.cfm/fuseaction/thread/tid/24853750/print/true.cfm
Here is a link to the literature on my Camper I pulled from another thread in the forum. Mine is the S85R. To bad it is way more of a beast than the lit actually states that it is. With that said, I believe it is one of the best laid out floor plans for a short bed truck. The only real draw back is the dining area is cramped, or I need to lose 50 lbs. It's probably the later. The thing we love about it is we can use the bathroom anytime and the whole camper for that matter, without pushing the slide out. It has tons of storage for things you buy while on vacation too.
It looks like we are going to be hunting for a new truck!
โNov-13-2018 10:00 PM
โNov-13-2018 09:49 PM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:
I nevertheless get a bit nervous whenever somebody in a forum offers an opinion that appears to contradict logic and the laws of physics, at least in so far as I think I understand them.
If you are running with rear COG personally, do you have with and without scale readings on your setup?
โNov-13-2018 09:37 PM
free radical wrote:
To add my 2 sense in..
Dont know where the OP drives,but isnt it illegal to be thousand pounds overloaded?
Here in Ontario truck enforcement safety cops are very strict and do pull over and check many trucks to see if youre overweight..
Too many accidents due to truckers not giving a sh**t about rules.
Dont come this way plz if youre overloaded.
โNov-13-2018 09:28 PM
DutchmenSport wrote:bwlyon wrote:valhalla360 wrote:
Getting rid of camper is a definite no. ... I'm seriously considering a new Ram 3500 long bed dually, and building a wooden bulkhead/platform to sit in front of camper to stop foward movement. ...Our plan is maybe in the next 5 years or so to move up to a Lance 1062 or Arctic Fox 990 and would need a long bed truck.
I think you have just answered your own question. I think this is the wisest choice. I'm positive, you'll be much happier with the dually carrying that weight! (But my opinion is biased anyway).
Do one thing though, compare the 3 big manufacturers and get the truck that has the most payload capacity for the dually. You won't regret it.
โNov-13-2018 09:16 PM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:
The problem with putting a short bed camper on a long bed truck is that you might be shifting the camper's center of gravity back too far. The camper's center of gravity MUST be forward of - or at worst, directly above - the truck's rear axle.
If it falls BEHIND the rear axle, the rear axle acts like the center of one of those playground teeter-totters and actually takes weight OFF the front axle, which can cause steering and handling safety issues.
***Link Removed***
โNov-13-2018 07:26 PM
โNov-13-2018 06:48 PM
Optimistic Paranoid wrote:wnjj wrote:
Putting a short bed camper on a long bed truck is perfectly OK. So is having the COG behind the rear axle, despite the RVrumormill.net opinion.
I have no personal experience with running a truck/camper combo with the center of gravity behind the rear axle.
I nevertheless get a bit nervous whenever somebody in a forum offers an opinion that appears to contradict logic and the laws of physics, at least in so far as I think I understand them.
If you are running with rear COG personally, do you have with and without scale readings on your setup?
โNov-13-2018 06:41 PM
โNov-13-2018 06:14 PM
โNov-13-2018 05:33 PM
โNov-13-2018 04:30 PM
burningman wrote:
To all you people who think the sky will fall if you have your camper COG slightly behind the rear axle - what do you think happens when you hitch a heavy trailer at the rear bumper, four feet behind the rear axle?
And how about the guys who add four more feet with a hitch extension?