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 > Truck / 5th Wheel Combo - Do the numbers add up?

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Paul39

Michigan

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Joined: 09/26/2023

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Posted: 09/28/23 07:17am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Thanks for the responses. A few interesting points.

For 2023 the King Ranch (and other versions) went from a standard 10,000 GVWR to 10,500-10,600 so payload has been increased (at least on paper - as the curb weights are very similar)over the previous years

The 6480 curb weight is for the 4x4 crew 7.3l gas 6.75 bed - but as stated by others is not for the optioned out King Ranch - but a base vehicle.

I still might be ok with a 12,200 lb trailer (that is the trailers GVWR, not dry weight) but obviously the margin is getting low.

I'm set on the 6.75ft bed - as it will be 95% empty driving and 5% towing. For same reason I would like to stay to the F250 and not go to the F350. The 5th wheel (12,200 lbs) will be the largest I'm looking at and do not see myself upgrading. Too much money into these toys for a do-over. I'm looking at several 5vers a little smaller (30' x 11,000 lbs). I'm more inclined to downsize the trailer than upside the truck. But - the wife does like the larger one [emoticon]

I'm going to stop by the dealership today and look at trucks. Will be checking the door stickers out and would like to see the new on board scales in the trucks - which will probably cause more confusion because I'm sure it will give another set of inconsistent numbers.

Thanks again to those that responded.

StirCrazy

Kamloops, BC, Canada

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Posted: 09/28/23 07:55am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Paul39 wrote:

Looking for input on my potential truck/5th wheel combo. A little background first. I have had trailers, but this would be my first 5th wheel. As I am opening this up to the weight police, I am looking for honest opinions and I don’t want to make a costly mistake. With that said, my opinion (as an automotive engineer) is that I’m a rule follower (regarding GVWR, etc) but I have no problem being close to the limit as I know there is a significant safety factor already built into those numbers. With that said – here is what I am looking at:

Tow vehicle
2023/4 Ford F250 4x4 7.3l gas short bed well optioned (maybe King Ranch)
From what I have found on the internet
Rear GAWR 6,340
Front GAWR 5,600
Tow Capacity 16,500
Payload 3,923
GVWR 10,500
Curb Weight 6,480 – 6550 (I see different amounts depending on what site I go to)

So – my math says 10,500 GVWR – 7100 Truck (added 550lbs for people/etc) – 200lbs for hitch (may need a slider) leaves 3,200 for pin weight. Assuming a 22% pin weight puts me at 14,500lb max 5th wheel.

I’m looking at a Cougar 290RLS
Dry Wt 10,124 lbs
Hitch 1,805
GVWR 12,200
Length 33’8”

I know many will say just get the F350, but the truck will be used 95% as a daily driver and 5% towing. Seems like I have a reasonable margin. ~4,000 lbs on tow capacity, ~500 lbs cargo capacity/GVWR assuming trailer is loaded to GVWR.

Does anyone see flaws in my logic before a spend a small fortune on these toys? Is the Curb weight of 6,550 for a short wb 4x4 7.3l crew seem right? I looked up all the specs for this particular truck and it seems consistent in that range, but comments on other posts look like the truck weight could be more. Also – any comments on the Cougar 290RLS?


ya you're going to need a bit more payload. As for being a daily driver, there is going to be no difference between an f250 gasser and a f350 gasser what's so ever aside from the badge. I can tell you right now add at least 500lbs to that pin weight. my cougar was advertised at 2350lbs, and it came in slightly over 3000lbs. Don't forget that pin weight is done with no options on the rv and everything empty or missing (like batteries and propane bottles which are right at the front. so, once you start adding propane and tanks, batteries, any options, water, "stuff" in the bedroom and more "stuff" in the storage below, that weight goes up drastically. I thought I would be safe with my 99 F250 diesel but I was over on the rear axle, so I had to get a newer f350


2014 F350 6.7 Platinum
2016 Cougar 330RBK
1991 Slumberqueen WS100

ReneeG

Meridian, Idaho

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Posted: 09/28/23 07:58am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Without talking about all the numbers, ratios, GVW, etc. We towed our heavy FW (in sig) which is close to 14k fully loaded first with an F250, SRW, short bed. Big mistake. We added air bags to the pickup and they kept failing. We traded it in for an F350, long bed, dually and what a difference in towing. No sway, no wobble, just a solid ride! I would highly recommend a long bed for any heavy FW towing.


2011 Bighorn 3055RL
2011 F350 DRW 6.7L 4x4 Diesel Lariat and Hensley TrailerSaver BD3
1992 Jeep ZJ and 1978 Coleman Concord Pop-Up for remote camping
Dave & Renee plus (Champ, Molly, Paris, Missy, and Maggie in spirit), Mica and Mabel, both Rat Terriers!


wowens79

Georgia

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Posted: 09/28/23 08:16am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

I bought a 2022 F-350 7.3 4.30 Lariat last year, with plans to pull a similar 5th wheel in the future. Honestly it rides better than my 02 1500 did. The rear springs I think are the same until you get to the overload leaf.
My truck has 4204lbs of payload, and rated to tow 20k. I figured a little extra capacity is a good thing, I hate to have to push it to the limits.
It was less than a $1000 to go to the 350, and I have no regrets. My wife loves taking it on road trips even though it gets less than half the fuel milage of her Honda.
I don't think you will notice the ride difference not towing, get the 350.


2022 Ford F-350 7.3l
2002 Chevy Silverado 1500HD 6.0l 268k miles (retired)
2016 Heritage Glen 29BH
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Paul39

Michigan

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Posted: 09/28/23 09:29am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

"ya you're going to need a bit more payload. As for being a daily driver, there is going to be no difference between an f250 gasser and a f350 gasser what's so ever aside from the badge. I can tell you right now add at least 500lbs to that pin weight. my cougar was advertised at 2350lbs, and it came in slightly over 3000lbs. Don't forget that pin weight is done with no options on the rv and everything empty or missing (like batteries and propane bottles which are right at the front. so, once you start adding propane and tanks, batteries, any options, water, "stuff" in the bedroom and more "stuff" in the storage below, that weight goes up drastically. I thought I would be safe with my 99 F250 diesel but I was over on the rear axle, so I had to get a newer f350"

Trucks are getting bigger and more capable. An F250 from 2010 had a 2,850 lb payload, in 2016 had a 3,100 lb payload, 2022 a 3,470 lb payload, and now in 2024 has a 3,923 lb payload (I tried to match gas 4x4 6.75' crew cabs with high trim packages). So basically the standard 2024 F250 has about the same payload and towing capacity as the standard F350 of 10 years ago. But all good points and I will take a look at the F350s as well. Thank you

laknox

Arizona

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Posted: 09/28/23 10:20am Link  |  Quote  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

You're exactly right, Paul. My '02 2500 D'max 4x4 CC, 6.5' bed had less payload than 150/1500s from about 2015, and onward. I towed my old FW, 11,360 GVW, and was about 1,000 over on my combined GW and 600 over on my rear axle, but with 265 tires instead of the OEM 245s, I was =under= by about 800 lbs on the 265 tire rating.

Yeah, a gasser F250 would handle a 12k GVW FW OK, but a 350 would handle it great, not just OK. They're the same truck, with a bigger spring package and, maybe, brakes (can't remember). Biggest cost might be in the registration difference, depending on your state. :-)

I'm like you, in that I don't want to go much bigger than what I currently have, but I also have a 30' GN trailer and had to think about that, as well. Any future FW upgrade likely won't be more than 13k GVW, from what I'm looking at now, so I =could= have stuck with a 2500, but the price differential just didn't make sense to go with the 2500.

Lyle

* This post was edited 09/28/23 12:16pm by an administrator/moderator *


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