To each his own I guess. I have run the larger sized D tires on work trucks right along side work trucks pulling the same trailers wearing E rated tires. You must have a sensitive tushy as I, nor any of the professional drivers I employed ever found the trucks wearing D rated tires any more or less stable than the trucks fitted with E's. On many occasions I have pulled big loads cross country and through the mountains on D rated tires. The last trip was 1400 miles loaded to 23,900 gross. Try I-70 through Colorado loaded that way, I didn't have any problems at all. Lots of high speed corners on that road, still no perceptible issue, and again I also have a dually wearing six E rated tires for comparison. This is my second dually in the last 8 or so trucks. I don't even feel that is necessary for stability until the wieghts carried on the rear axle exceed the srw tires ratings. I probably have half a million miles experience with srw trucks pulling heavy loaded gooseneck trailers. I just fail to see or feel this great difference in stability between srw and drw trucks or D and E rated tires. I think it is a shame that people beat this stability drum so loudly. The differences in my book are slim to none. The only reason I see to pony up for a dually or E rated tires is if you need the wieght capacity.
As for the CTD being so heavy, sure it is heavy, but even my Megacab only has 4400 lbs on the front axle. That is well below the tires rated capacity, I run mine at 50 psi. I also drive it like a race car over the mountain passes, with no issues from the supposedly soft and squishy D rated tires. I guess I keep in the fray here because I really truely believe, based on experience, that this obsession with D and E rated tires is crazy. When it gets right down to it, the load capacity is the number that counts.
As for the CTD being so heavy, sure it is heavy, but even my Megacab only has 4400 lbs on the front axle. That is well below the tires rated capacity, I run mine at 50 psi. I also drive it like a race car over the mountain passes, with no issues from the supposedly soft and squishy D rated tires. I guess I keep in the fray here because I really truely believe, based on experience, that this obsession with D and E rated tires is crazy. When it gets right down to it, the load capacity is the number that counts.