Nothing really useful on that one. Payload is meaningless after adding stuff to the Jeep.What about the yellow/white sticker? It'll be close by in the area of that silver one.
Nothing really useful on that one. Payload is meaningless after adding stuff to the Jeep.What about the yellow/white sticker? It'll be close by in the area of that silver one.
Nothing really useful on that one. Payload is meaningless after adding stuff to the Jeep.
Have you had a chance to try this method yet ? With our camper manual brake lever fully pulled up the camper wheels are still rolling in the wheel chocks. I bought a drum brake adjustment tool off of Amazon but I haven’t had a chance yet to try and adjust the brakes.Has anyone used this 10 click method to adjust the Dweller brakes?
Push in on the star gear and lift it up. Keep doing this until the brake pads catch on your drum. When you can't spin your wheel by hand anymore, back the gear off by about 10 clicks by pushing down on the star gear. Does the wheel now spin freely (even if it sounds like the brake pads drag slightly on the drum)
I'm thinking of giving it a try. Let me know. Thanks
This is probably where we disagree (maybe?). That payload number is your maximum allowable weight you can add to the vehicle. Passengers, steel bumpers, recovery gear, heavier tires, tongue weight. Etc.Nothing really useful on that one. Payload is meaningless after adding stuff to the Jeep.
Somewhere in the manuals or online is the listed GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating) for that vehicle. It's probably around 6500#s or so. Then he just weighs his modified Jeep loaded and fueled up, and whatever is left is his allowable tongue weight.
Beyond that he'll also have a listed GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating) that he should technically not go over for the weight of his Jeep + his D15.
This is probably where we disagree (maybe?). That payload number is your maximum allowable weight you can add to the vehicle. Passengers, steel bumpers, recovery gear, heavier tires, tongue weight. Etc.
edit: after going back and looking, you were right. We didn't really need the payload. You're at 5420 without the trailer and a GVWR of 6250. That leaves you an available payload of approx 830lbs. Of which, tongue weight consumes 680lbs. Not a lot of margin.
Agreed 100%. I do carry a lot of tools and gear. This is why I have an F250 to tow my Dweller.The GVWR for each truck is on the door stickers.
We’re on the same page. Payload sticker after you modify or load a truck with tools recovery gear, winches, lift kits big tires etc is not useful as you are deducting payload by adding all that stuff.
Only bonus of that scale is full of fuel me in it 180 dressed, annd all my gear was in the truck; straps tools jack etc.
Guys have to scale weigh your truck subtract that from your gvwr to get your “new” or practical payload.
That’s where most folks fail, they load the truck, modify the truck, then look at the sticker and go “I got 1500 pounds of payload!” Add the wife her purse 2 kids 3 dogs there own beer belly and then a 600 pound hitch… and the motorcycle in the bed, fire wood etc and are grossly overweight.
When I tow you’ll find my bed empty and no extra stuff in the truck.
Congrats, how did the Glaadiator pull it. I will be getting a D15 and want to pull it with my JTR.Picked it up today!
Congrats, how did the Glaadiator pull it. I will be getting a D15 and want to pull it with my JTR.
Curious. Which Super Charger did you go with?Pulled great!
Now I got the D13, have a supercharger on the jeep, and an AEV lift kit designed to carry more weight than the stock suspension, 35’s and am re-geared to 4.63’s.
So my experience may be totally different.
Curious. Which Super Charger did you go with?