Picked up my new truck Jan 2nd. 3500 SRW 4X4 Reg Cab Aisin Rear Air Suspension. It is used as a work truck towing a 20 ft 6500# gooseneck trailer most of the time and a 36 ft gooseneck horse trailer the rest of the time. The short trailer has about a 2000# hitch weight and gets towed about 35,000 miles a year on mostly secondary roads some of which are pretty rough. I replaced a 2012 SRW 4X4 Laramie Crew 68RFE. The short trailer transmits much more of the poor road quality to the truck the same as a shorter wheelbase vehicle rides worse on rough roads than a long wheelbase vehicle. My prior trucks have always been upgraded to Bilstein Shocks when new to help with ride quality. I have 1000 miles on the new truck, about 600 with the trailer. Empty the truck rides a little better than the 2012. Because it is a supplemental air suspension the truck needs a load on it to select the alternate ride height, the empty truck just doesn't weigh enough to settle down on the leaf springs. At normal or alternate ride height the two additional lower leaves at the front of the axle are not in contact with the main springs. These leaves only come into play on hard acceleration to control torque wind-up on the axle, on severe bumps and potholes , and on cornering for roll stability.
With the trailer the new truck definitely rides better than the old one, a very comfortable refined ride. If you hit a pothole or bump ( in this case a rough railroad crossing a little too fast :-laf ) and the secondary leaves make contact you will feel it but the truck handles it as a one ton truck should, no excessive bounce or sag. With the improved ride I am not planning to upgrade Bilsteins any time soon.
The aisin is a huge imrovement over the 68rfe. With the back roads and up and down hills the constant shifting and shift flare on the 2012 68rfe was very annoying, the aisin shifts fast and firm providing a much better driving experience.
Overall I am very satisfied with the way the new truck is performing.
With the trailer the new truck definitely rides better than the old one, a very comfortable refined ride. If you hit a pothole or bump ( in this case a rough railroad crossing a little too fast :-laf ) and the secondary leaves make contact you will feel it but the truck handles it as a one ton truck should, no excessive bounce or sag. With the improved ride I am not planning to upgrade Bilsteins any time soon.
The aisin is a huge imrovement over the 68rfe. With the back roads and up and down hills the constant shifting and shift flare on the 2012 68rfe was very annoying, the aisin shifts fast and firm providing a much better driving experience.
Overall I am very satisfied with the way the new truck is performing.