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Advice on Towing

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I am also new to this. I have a 2021 dodge ram 1500 with 5.7 hemi echo torque. It rated for about 12,000 lbs. I currently tow a car on a Trailer. Its total weight of 5,000 lbs. I have no problems with the power of the engine and the brakes work great while towing.
My question: I am thinking of getting a tow behind RV, with a total loaded weight of about 8,500lbs. I would assume this will ok with my PU truck. Any thoughts, suggestions or concerns?

Thanks
 
I am also new to this. I have a 2021 dodge ram 1500 with 5.7 hemi echo torque. It rated for about 12,000 lbs. I currently tow a car on a Trailer. Its total weight of 5,000 lbs. I have no problems with the power of the engine and the brakes work great while towing.
My question: I am thinking of getting a tow behind RV, with a total loaded weight of about 8,500lbs. I would assume this will ok with my PU truck. Any thoughts, suggestions or concerns?

Thanks
Be careful I have a 2021 ram 1500 e torque also, none of the 5.7's are rated that much. Even with the 3.92 gears they max at 11,000. Also the allowable tongue weight is usually abysmal after you add in all the heavy options these trucks have. For example the Limited with sunroof, airbags, bed boxes and 2 part hitch only has less than 1000 lbs cargo capacity. Just be careful and research your vin number, not what the FCA website says.
 
NEED ADVICE

New travel trailer after looking at following specs do I need to upgrade to a Ram 2500? If so would you get Turbo Diesel or 6.4 gas? Any advice would help me out.

EQUALIZER SWAY/DISTRIBUTION HITCH

Thanks

Karen Baker



2021 Ram 1500 5.7 hemi Etorque Axle Ratio 3.92


GVWR – 6900

Payload – 1760

Base weight -total – 5136

Front – 2983

Rear – 2153

GAWR –

Front – 3700

Rear - 4100

CTCWR – 17000

MAX TRAILER WEIGHT – 11,370



2021 Grand Design 2970RL

Length = 34 feet

Dry Weight – 7397

Payload – 1598

GVWR – 8995

Hitch Weight - 751
Well for starters, most use 80% of ratings to figure the numbers. The RAM 1500 payload of 1760 lbs, and a suggested target of 80% of the payload is 1408 lbs. So 1408 - 751 - 2x 200lb passengers - 20 gal fuel = 137 lbs for "stuff" that would be in the tow vehicle. Not a lot of margin

Then for RAM tow weight of 11380 thus 80% of 11370 is 9096. 9096 - 8995 = 101 Those numbers look OK but not a lot of margin. Loading carefully the tow vehicle and trailer and you should be under the recommended values.

Yes for towing that trailer you DO WANT a weight-distribution hitch with a sway bar.
 
First thing I would say is get rid of the dry weight. You will never tow it at that weight. You don't even tow it at that weight when you leave the dealership. Concentrate on the GVW. You also can forget about the "Max trailer weight". At 11,370lbs you will have a minimum tongue weight (12%) of 1364 pounds. Add a spare for the truck, ONE person, and a tank of gas and you are over payload capacity without anything else. That 751lb tongue weight is the light weight of the trailer. You are probably looking closer to 1080lbs (12% of GVW). That only leaves you with an additional 680lbs. Subtract weight of people, equipment in the truck, and the possibility of a higher tongue weight and you can see where this is going. Can you tow it? Yep, no doubt in my mind. Is it going to be blown around by a semi or side wind? Yep, bet it will. Would your truck be able to handle emergenct manuevers? Doubtful in my feeble mind.
Not trying to discourage you by any means, just trying to keep you safe. Just remember, you cannot have too much water in your black tank, or too much hitch, or too much truck. Believe it or not, my 14,000lb gvw trailer is a lot closer to maxing out my one ton dually that you would think........
 
Without getting into the numbers like a college calculus lesson I try to keep things simple for the most part. Anytime you are looking to a TT over 30 feet and over 6000 lbs dry and we all know dry weight is just that…….never tow using a non-heavy duty PU.

Just pony up to a work truck. If you think one day you will go beyond the TT to a fifth wheel you may want to start calculating the numbers a bit to see if a gasser heavy duty or diesel is best.

Do people tow trailers you are asking about with 1500 series trucks? All day. But I would hate for that one time of catastrophic failure due to wear and tear or stressing that series of truck to a breaking point and injure others.

Now if you like the math of calculating precisely, go for it. Just don’t go with just getting by.
 
Without getting into the numbers like a college calculus lesson I try to keep things simple for the most part. Anytime you are looking to a TT over 30 feet and over 6000 lbs dry and we all know dry weight is just that…….never tow using a non-heavy duty PU.

Just pony up to a work truck. If you think one day you will go beyond the TT to a fifth wheel you may want to start calculating the numbers a bit to see if a gasser heavy duty or diesel is best.

Do people tow trailers you are asking about with 1500 series trucks? All day. But I would hate for that one time of catastrophic failure due to wear and tear or stressing that series of truck to a breaking point and injure others.

Now if you like the math of calculating precisely, go for it. Just don’t go with just getting by.
Take your tow vehicle or the VIN number to the vehicle dealer. Ask the service department to look up the trailer towing specs for that specific vehicle. The GVRW of models of the same year and type will vary due to accessories. Then multiply that number by 80%. The result is the maximum GVRW of the trailer you should be towing.
 

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