I did bilstein shocks, hellwig sway bar, lower stable loads, and hellwig 5300 helper springs (they did not install upper overloads from the factory on 2017 3500 SRW trucksThose are nice but can you still find them, did they stop making them? You also have the same truck as mine, same year even, different color. I see you have the non slide Lance. Any other suspension mods. How does it ride and do you switch out tires when not carrying the camper or just leave them year round
While we discourage exceeding the GVWR/payload rating of your truck, there is one little-known trick employed by more knowledgeable pickup truck owner’s to squeeze out even more cargo hauling capability out of their trucks.
Despite not needing it here in Idaho I did make a new sticker with a 14K GVWR for my 05 after some modifications. The 9900 GVWR on that truck was a joke, even if it wasn’t a binding rating.
want to go to a slide in that will be a wet weight of 4300lbs on my 2017 3500 SRW and I guess the stock are somewhere between 3400-3700 rim capacity.
@JPM upper overloads went away when the 4th Gen came out. I had them on my 05 and they were useless with airbags, even with a RAW approaching 9K.
The auto-level 3500 beats them all for stability and handling thou, at least from what I’ve seen.
@Tuesdak It depends on where you live. GVWR isn’t a legal limit in many states, most from what I recall. For example in Idaho the term GVWR only exists in the glossary.
GVWR is more of a vehicle class rating than a weight rating. Look at the 3500 DRWs FAWR and RAWR and how far short of the combined number the GVWR is.
Also, it is federally legal to get a new GVWR. Despite not needing it here in Idaho I did make a new sticker with a 14K GVWR for my 05 after some modifications. The 9900 GVWR on that truck was a joke, even if it wasn’t a binding rating.
That’s all personal use. Once you get into commercial use the game changes.
I had factory upper overload springs on my 03 3500 SRW and aftermarket air bags, once I engaged the overloads with Torquelift upper over load stops the necessity of air bags went away. Stability vastly improved and the riding on balloons sensation went away .If the super beefy upper factory springs never were engaged then they were useless. When I went shopping for a newer truck there was no consensus on factory air bags and slide ins so opted out. So they might be better .
I had the same experience on my 06 using the torqlift stable loads. After adding them to bring in the upper over loads it road better with less sway to the point I mostly quit using the bags.
On my 18 drw with factory bags it took adding a roadmaster rear antisway bar to get the sway with the camper down to at least what I had with the 06 srw with the stableloads.
There are three sets on craigslist, two in steel and one cast aluminum Visons. I think they fit.Be careful of old used tires, they age out before they wear out.
SET OF 6 - Vision Rickson 19.5 wheels & Michelins 8 on 6.5 lug... (craigslist.org)
My truck was a DRW. The original tires were LT235/80R17-E, max rated at 3,086 in a single configuration (front axle) and 2,756 in a dual configuration (rear axle). That adds up to a max of 6,172 lbs total for the front axle and 11,024 lbs on the rear axle using 6 tires.
I converted it to SRW by replacing the factory wheels with some steel Ricksons, made in October of 2014. The wheels each have a 5,000 lbs DOT stamp on them. I also changed the bed to SRW, but left the original DRW axle.
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Wow ! You did the exact opposite of what I wanted to do , convert my SRW 3500 CC SB to a DRW. (BTW they don't make em.) I chickened out.
Good job, To each their own!