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Well-known member
- May 5, 2021
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rear axle and tire rating seems to be the biggest hurdle when you do all the math. Also double check the rims
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I would definitely keep the stock tire size on whatever I buy.Oh man, if we are talking bigger tires, I will give my input.
Changing tire size from OEM effectively changes the gear ratio in the diffs.
That change goes in the wrong direction.
For example, you truck comes from Ford with 3.73 gears.
You change tires, always bigger, you change that effective gear ratio down to say a 3.55, depends on tire size change. There are calculators out there to help with that.
GVWR and GCWR are dependent on gear ratio.
Essentially, you change tires to bigger, you change your gear ratio the wrong way, you lower your effective tow ratings. GVWR and GCWR will go down.
This is really getting into the weeds, but it is reality.
Or buy a smaller trailer. LOL.Buy a newer Dually (even Horse Girls know this part)...
Keep it stock...
Enjoy life.
I know a lot of people do it but how much is reasonable and what you can get away with? Or do you just flat out weigh everything and make sure you're not going 1 lb over. Example right now is I'm looking at an '06-07 Duramax single rear wheel crew cab 2500 truck. Would like to put a toy hauler behind it with the Funco in it. In my other thread I used an example. That truck has a tow rating of 12,000 lb. Just one of the trailers posted came in at 8,500 lb dry. I have to assume that would be fairly normal weight for a toy hauler of that size. Weight rating on that particular trailer is a little over 14,000 lb and with the buggy and all the gear in it I could see it being easy to get it up to that weight. So how many of you think it is okay to tow a couple thousand over? Or not?
I respectfully disagree. I do agree that GCVWR is a critical rating and weight. However, you could be under on GCVWR and still have an overloaded truck axle, too much tongue weight, overloaded trailer axles, etc. This is why when you pull onto a scale it weighs each axle independently and gives you axle weights and total weight.Towing capacity means nothing really. The number you want to focus on is the GCVWR. That's what you're truck, trailer, and everything in it weigh on the scale.
I respectfully disagree. I do agree that GCVWR is a critical rating and weight. However, you could be under on GCVWR and still have an overloaded truck axle, too much tongue weight, overloaded trailer axles, etc. This is why when you pull onto a scale it weighs each axle independently and gives you axle weights and total weight.
And tow capacity is also important. It factors in many issues such as hitch rating, driveline ratings, transmission, brakes, etc. As an extreme example, you could remove the hood, front fenders and a bunch of weight from the front of your truck. That doesn't mean you have increased the tow capacity.