Fullsizexj
NAXJA Forum User
- Location
- Milton WV
I am insulating everything, I like to stay warm.
just didn't know if you were insulating the back part where the buggy will ride.I am insulating everything, I like to stay warm.
Not saying you're gonna be overweight, just sayin the lighter the better.
Front weights are the biggest concern, steering blowouts suck I've experienced them 1st hand on my pusher. Since it's a truck instead of maxing out your air pressure on the front, you can go for 16 ply front tires which will raise your weight capacity somewhere around 1000 to 2000 lbs.
are you putting a rear wall on the rear bunk so the only entrance is from the living quarters? i assume that wall would need to be removable so you can get the mattress in and out?
They've already got G rated tires on the front axle.
Something like 4400 lbs a piece capacity in a single wheel app.
it's the front suspension and the drop beam that's rated to 7K.
Like I said if you switch to a '16" ply tire, it is rated at 6175 single and has a "H" rating, not a "G", this adds 500lbs per tire gain. The front end drop beam has a higher rating than YOUR tires, it's the tires that limit your weight capacity. When you get an over weight ticket on a truck and it's the front axle it's due to the tire rating. That's why you see some trucks with bigger or wider tires up front. When you see the trucks with the big donut tires up front that is usually a 20k axle rating! Most single axle business class bobtails (trucks) that is like the one we speak of, are 20k to 26k rating total with a front axle rating of 10k. Any thing with a higher weight rating requires a commercial license.
Like I said if you switch to a '16" ply tire, it is rated at 6175 single and has a "H" rating, not a "G", this adds 500lbs per tire gain. The front end drop beam has a higher rating than YOUR tires, it's the tires that limit your weight capacity. When you get an over weight ticket on a truck and it's the front axle it's due to the tire rating. That's why you see some trucks with bigger or wider tires up front. When you see the trucks with the big donut tires up front that is usually a 20k axle rating! Most single axle business class bobtails (trucks) that is like the one we speak of, are 20k to 26k rating total with a front axle rating of 10k. Any thing with a higher weight rating requires a commercial license.
The problem with this is if you got pulled over by DOT or at the scales, what documentation would you have to prove you have heavier rated axles & springs.Makes me wonder if you could upgrade axles and springs to something heavier.
Not saying you'll need it. I'm just curious if its possible to do without too much trouble.
True, I guess I didn't word that right. If you had to prove at some point, what paperwork would you use, other than a receipt for springs & axles.Why would DOT pull a registered motor home in?
If you were trying to sell it & were using the fact it had heavier weight capacity as a good selling point. I am NOT trying to start chit, just throwing out a "what if".you would never have to prove it