ITTOG
Well-known member
So read the post below numerous times until it sinks in. If in fact, what you indicate is true then the OP's truck would have broken the second he went over GVWR. @IdaSHO is correct.No more questions besides the ones I asked and you didn't answer. But I digress, you are a man who has convinced himself of something, don't let me stand in the way of that.
And yet the OP is probably making his way through his journey without any problems related to his gvw. And people on this forum ponder why it is mocked by a lot of people.
All engineered items in this country are rated lower than their max capabilities. The reason this is done is to prevent disaster. Every industry has their standards required for overbuilding. I am a chemical engineer and have designed miles of pumping, pumping, and vessel systems. If I needed piping that could handle 100 psig because that is what my process demands, do you think I would install 100 psig piping? No, as there is no room for safety. Instead I may spec the pipe for 150 psig.
Other than the safety aspect there is also manufacturing defects, in almost everything. What if the casting for a part of a vehicle has an impurity or an internal hairline crack? Without any safety factor that item will break at GVWR.