SChen said:Glad to see I'm not the only one who has gone through this... I had a Dodge 1500 and wanted a small trailer to go camping with, choices were very limited, so we started looking at the 2500, but my wife was the one who decided that the truck would not be the limiting factor in whatever we wanted to tow, so we went with a dually and absolutely love it. No second guessing on what we should have done.
My wife is in the army and normally drives a MINI Cooper S to work. She had to take the dually in one day and the First Sergeant pulled in next to her in his Duramax 2500 and couldn't believe it when she got out of the dually, especially after all the grief he gives her for driving the MINI.
Scott
klenger said:SChen: Does the Mini fit in the bed of the truck? Now, that would be car pooling. :-laf :-laf
klenger said:SChen: Does the Mini fit in the bed of the truck? Now, that would be car pooling. :-laf :-laf
AMink said:We have a tt, and I have never towed a 5er, so I can't comment there, but I do know that a tt has a lot less tongue weight for the same size rig. Downfall is longer overall length; some parks/campgrounds have limits. Upside is I can use my bed with shell to put all kinds of stuff in and I don't have the 5er hitch mounts in my bed when I'm not using it.
:-laf
It depends where you go and what you do. For sitting in RV parks... maybe.Grizzly said:The advantages of a 5th wheel far out weigh the convenience of have storage in the bed with a shell.
sarj said:It depends where you go and what you do. For sitting in RV parks... maybe.![]()
RustyJC said:And herein lies the problem with the small print. Along with the tow ratings, buried at the bottom is the admonition that none of the truck's other ratings should be exceeded - including the GVWR. With heavy 5th wheels that typically carry 20% or more of their loaded weight on the kingpin, a SRW truck will always exceed its GVWR before it reaches the tow rating - the significantly higher GVWR is the advantage of the dually insofar as ratings are concerned when towing a 5th wheel.
Rusty
Texas Diesel said:This statement haunted me since I first heard it a couple of years ago. I fianlly dumped the SRW and got a DRW. Best decision I ever made, no regrets.
Much improved stability and peace of mind about a rear tire blowing. I heard a trucker once talking about SRW's carrying campers or high COG FW's. He said he ALWAYS saw body bags at the accident scene after a tire failure. With a tire blowout & DRW's, just saw people walking around pointing at the shredded tire on the rim ( the other tire was holding the weight ).
Once a drove a company truck with DRW's. On the way home one day I heard a bang. Looked in the mirrors and saw nothing, truck handled ok so I kept going. To my surprise, back at the shop I discovered that the passenger side inboard tire was nothing but two beads on the wheel.![]()
Yes you can carry heavy loads on a SRW, but how much is your life worth?