Of course I would never run over GVWR on purpose. But, supposing I was close to GVWR and was hiking from the truck and found 1,000 lbs of buried Spanish gold up in the Sierra Madre? I would naturally want to bring that gold home to donate to a museum. What mods could I make to 'prepare' for that happening, just in case I 'accidentally' go over GVWR.
I have a 2004 F350 SuperDuty 4x4 Diesel Short bed. GVWR is 9,900 lbs and vehicle weight is 7,700. Gives 2,200 lbs payload. Tires are load range E so I'm okay there. Axles are well under 'accidental' overages. So while I can't actually raise the payload, and would never imply that I have, what might I do to give myself a false sense of security for carrying maybe 600 lbs of gold over the GVWR? I've got decades of wrenching and mod'ing experience but I'm new to trucks, and diesels, and campers.
What I know about so far are air bags, Timbrens, sway bars, and extra leafs. (Using a Torklift/FastGun tiedown system.) I'd prefer to start simple and get more complicated as I learn about how the truck carries this camper- er, treasure. When I find it. What have folks found works better, Timbrens or air bags? The truck already has a pretty beefy sway bar. Is there anything I should do up front? Do I need to beef up the bed rails? Are there any other mods I might do other than sell the truck and start over? It's a super low-miles pre-DEF and pre-DPF rig and I was very lucky to find it. Maybe put in an axle from like a 2007 which has higher axle load ratings?
Actually, the same model of this truck had gained 1,500 lbs of payload by 2007 when Ford switched to the even less-reliable and more-hated 6.4 Powerstroke. I'm wondering if they actually changed anything or if they just weren't seeing payload failures so kept pushing up the GVWR spec? As an engineer myself I know this is how specs sometimes work. It's not so much a design as how far they could push it before it brakes. With thousands of trucks on the road they'd have some really good statistics. The truth about how they do this is in the safe along with the origin of COVID and The Grassy Knoll.
I have a 2004 F350 SuperDuty 4x4 Diesel Short bed. GVWR is 9,900 lbs and vehicle weight is 7,700. Gives 2,200 lbs payload. Tires are load range E so I'm okay there. Axles are well under 'accidental' overages. So while I can't actually raise the payload, and would never imply that I have, what might I do to give myself a false sense of security for carrying maybe 600 lbs of gold over the GVWR? I've got decades of wrenching and mod'ing experience but I'm new to trucks, and diesels, and campers.
What I know about so far are air bags, Timbrens, sway bars, and extra leafs. (Using a Torklift/FastGun tiedown system.) I'd prefer to start simple and get more complicated as I learn about how the truck carries this camper- er, treasure. When I find it. What have folks found works better, Timbrens or air bags? The truck already has a pretty beefy sway bar. Is there anything I should do up front? Do I need to beef up the bed rails? Are there any other mods I might do other than sell the truck and start over? It's a super low-miles pre-DEF and pre-DPF rig and I was very lucky to find it. Maybe put in an axle from like a 2007 which has higher axle load ratings?
Actually, the same model of this truck had gained 1,500 lbs of payload by 2007 when Ford switched to the even less-reliable and more-hated 6.4 Powerstroke. I'm wondering if they actually changed anything or if they just weren't seeing payload failures so kept pushing up the GVWR spec? As an engineer myself I know this is how specs sometimes work. It's not so much a design as how far they could push it before it brakes. With thousands of trucks on the road they'd have some really good statistics. The truth about how they do this is in the safe along with the origin of COVID and The Grassy Knoll.