My 3rd gen was normally over the 5200lb front rating, even empty. Throw 4 dudes in the cab and nothing in the bed behind the rear axle and it would be hundreds of pounds over. The only time it was under was with over 1000lbs of tongue weight on a trailer.
It’s a good thing that they upgraded the axle to 6K lbs in my ‘18 as I float around 5650 loaded for camping.
My front axle weight changes with my pin weight now, but not by much. I do have the pin as far fwd as the hitch will allow thou.
Hopefully, it’s gone UP unless remaing the same (the ideal). It’s a static placeholder number in any event. Percentage spread FF/RR is the thing.
1). Need to disconnect while on scale. Get the genuine percentage. Full fresh water, propane and typical load for camping.
2). Truck with max fuel top off and loaded same with all pax aboard. Get separate weigh after parking trailer.
Combined gross I wouldn’t worry over past needing a CDL at 26k and higher.
3). The
baseline for any vehicle is the same. Day of purchase transfer over
permanent gear. Top fuel. With driver only, get CAT Scale weight (replicable across USA). This is the
adjusted true empty weight.
Ship weight or curb weight have no meaning any more. Toss ‘em.
Scale values are placeholders.
The trailer exerts FORCE (mass), NOT weight.
It changes with every foot of every road traveled.
The PERCENTAGE of force at each of three points is what matters.
A 5’er or gooseneck hitch
DOESN'T make for a more stable trailer. That’s down to the DESIGN of the two vehicles, each. These two hitches make simple the problem of distributing the trailer hitch
FORCES.
Keeping the Steer Axle at the same scale value hitched and unhitched TENDS to make stability better. As well as constancy in steering “feel”.
That’s it.
FWIW, I can all-day-long continue in emergency maneuvers with my 35’ TT that will roll ANY 5’er RV
instantly. The design of the vehicles, as said, AND where the hitch type does the same work as 5’er/GN (in this case, a Hensley-patent WDH; it’s actually better than those two where comparable).
“Going over” not perfectly relevant.
Nail down the percentage.
.