The OP was considering a truck purchase, so he's not stuck with something yet.
Thanks for the reminder! For some reason I thought the OP was talking about a 1st gen Tundra he already had...
If I were to buy a 2nd gen access cab, 4x4 Tundra with a payload capacity of 1,480 lbs do you think I could get away with having it loaded down full time with around 2,000 lbs of camper + supplies by doing things like removing all the rear seats, tailgate (would have a slide in camper so no need for tailgate anyway), and upgrading the rear suspension?
I'm going to be moving into a slide in truck camper full time soon and really want a Toyota because of reliability, but the Tundra's payload capacity is just so bad. Brainstorming desperately before I cave and get an F250.
This was exactly my situation a few years back... only I was stupid and thought by removing the bed (and rear seats!) and building a relatively light camper, I would be under GVWR (7200 lb). Then later I made a list of "stuff" and added it up... whoa. Not a lot of mods and stuff, but it still adds up to over 1500 lbs! I'm hoping to squeak under the axle ratings now... which is 950 lbs over GVWR. It's a long bed, and the rear seat will be storage, so even distribution shouldn't be difficult.
I very seriously considered getting an F250-350 then. But I already had the Tundra, have fond memories of a '84 Toyota PU I'd overloaded and abused, and comparable F250s were at least $10k more... and I found an old thread on one of the Tundra forums where everyone raved about how great it was for hauling a camper. They were all seriously overweight. I think one guy even said he had over 200k miles on one that weighed 8800 lbs, with no issues. I talked to some Tundra + camper owners too... including a couple who were hauling an enormous camper and living in it. I asked him how it was, and he replied "oh, it's fine... great since we got the airbags." Apparently he tried it first with no suspension mods?! Yes, I'm getting new springs, shocks, airbags, and tires. But I would have done that with an F250 also. In the end I think it's very possible that the Tundra will have fewer issues overall, so I'm running with it.
But if I had it to do over, I'd get an F350 with a 7.3, 10spd, 4.30 gears, and add a mild lift, and 37s.