Originally posted by QRTRHRS
MerrickNJr,
Do you know what your tongue weight is with that 19k trailer? Also, do you have ABS? Any problems there?
No problems with the ABS. I had a 2000 Chevy, 2500 with an auto that I put 285/75/16's on, (which BTW will rub when you turn nearly all the way), I had no ABS problems on that truck, and, our old Navigator had 255/70/16's and it didn't have ABS probs either. THese trucks had the same size tires all around, and we didn't ever drive in snow, so I guess I can'ttell you how they work in neccassary ABS conditions.
In all reality I do not know the Tongue weight of the trailer, all I remember is the D. P. S. Officer that pulled us over and wieghed us had the trailer weigh in close to 19,000pounds. We calculated that when we load it up, (1,000gallons of water) plus a few hundred gallons of other liquids, as Diesel, Oil, Gear lube, Hydraulic fluid... that the weight was pushing 30,000pounds.
The trailer pulled very well, and didn't sit the truck down too bad. The overloads on the Dodge wouldn't barely touch when towing empty, and kinda press good on the little pads when full.
I looked closely at the tires last evening and there is just literally a fingers width between the top of the tires,(1/2") and at the bottom I would assume about a 1/4" looking hard at the sidewalls i can see they are slightly glazed from a small amount of touching, but the are not worn at all. The two tires rub on the sidewall lettering and the lettering looks as new as day one, except a little glazed/or clean, definatley not worn.
We pulled our trailer out in 100*-115* temperatures and have never had a tire failure with Michelins.
On a side note, we usually didn't pull for more than a constant 2-3 hours at 70MPH
Soon as I get the pictures developed, I'll post 'em up.
MerrickNJr