truck payload rating system in america ?

   / truck payload rating system in america ? #51  
I was doing some research on trucks this weekend and was amazed by looking at the new 2009 F-150. I agree the tow ratings for 1/2 ton trucks are getting amazing. They now have a 6 speed tranny, electronic locking rear diff, and 320HP and 390 FT LBS Torque with a bigger engine in the works if this economy does not put the brakes on that. The 2 wheel drive max tow rating is 11,300# and the 4 wheel drive is 11,200#

I have stated before that I feel they need to do away with 3/4 tons and this is truly the case now. The 1/2 tons will do most of what 95% of the buyers need and the next step in my onion should be a SRW 1 ton followed by a dually 1 ton.

Chris

I was just reading an article about the 2009 F150 in a magazine in the dentist's office this morning, and in addition to the 11,300# towing capacity, it listed a cargo capacity of 3,030#. Now if I could just afford to buy one.:rolleyes:
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #52  
Right now there are some good deals but not necessarily on the 2009's. My friend just picked up a new left over 2008 4x4 extended cab and he paid less than the truck he traded in, a 1993 Chevy 2 wheel drive long bed 305 V8. He could not believe he could pay less 15 years later and get more truck. He said he got employee pricing plus something like $5500 in rebates.

Chris
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #53  
I got what I felt was a really good deal on my '08. Now the '09 specs make me jealous! So far, I'm really impressed with mine though.
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #54  
The 2 wheel drive max tow rating is 11,300# and the 4 wheel drive is 11,200#


I've always been confused on this. Are we talking actual tow rating, or GCWR? Because it sounds misleading to call it "max tow rating" if it is actually GCWR.
Let's take my 92 F250 diesel. 3.55 gears, SRW. It has a GCWR of 12,000lbs, but wet and with a couple of people in it, weights about 6000. That is off a receiver hitch or fifth wheel/GN. That only leaves 6,000lbs for a trailer. Which isn't much if you consider that my tractor with loader and shredder weighs about 4500 and the trailer weights 1600. That is already 100lbs over before counting anything like chains, tools, etc. Will my truck pull it? Of course, I don't even know it is back there.

Or am I figuring something wrong here?
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ?
  • Thread Starter
#55  
Right now there are some good deals but not necessarily on the 2009's. My friend just picked up a new left over 2008 4x4 extended cab and he paid less than the truck he traded in, a 1993 Chevy 2 wheel drive long bed 305 V8. He could not believe he could pay less 15 years later and get more truck. He said he got employee pricing plus something like $5500 in rebates.

Chris

I work at a small payloader factory in Holland. Volvo is ruining our markets by dumping their unsold North American equipment for crap prices in our markets...

I think the extreme rebates are because they want to get rid of them: The loss of paying workers that are at home because they have nothing to do at work, would be more than the loss of selling trucks under the manufacturing cost price.
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #56  
I've always been confused on this. Are we talking actual tow rating, or GCWR? Because it sounds misleading to call it "max tow rating" if it is actually GCWR.
Let's take my 92 F250 diesel. 3.55 gears, SRW. It has a GCWR of 12,000lbs, but wet and with a couple of people in it, weights about 6000. That is off a receiver hitch or fifth wheel/GN. That only leaves 6,000lbs for a trailer. Which isn't much if you consider that my tractor with loader and shredder weighs about 4500 and the trailer weights 1600. That is already 100lbs over before counting anything like chains, tools, etc. Will my truck pull it? Of course, I don't even know it is back there.

Or am I figuring something wrong here?

You are not confused. GCWR =truck plus cargo and trailer max weight.
GVWR=truck plus cargo only.



The reason you truck has such a low GCWR is the 3.55 gear. You did not state what engine it has but I am guessing its a gas truck.

This goes with what I have been saying for a while about the new 1/2 tons. They are much more trucks than the 3/4 tons made 10 plus years ago. For example, my 2007 F-150 SuperCrew 4x4 with 3.73's has a GCWR of 15,000#'s and weighs just shy of 5,700#'s, so it can tow 9,300#'s or 3,000#'s more than your F-250 on paper. It has a GVWR of 7,200#'s so it can haul 1,500#'s in the cab or bed. By the way my tuck actually weighs 5,660#'s with me in it a and 3/4 tank of fuel plus all the stuff that lives in the truck like tow straps, hitches, small tool box, gloves, flash light, ect, ect.

I have a 2004 F-250 4x4 Extended Cab Short Bed with the 6.0 PSD and 3.73's. It weighs 7,600#'s with me, 3/4 tank, and all my junk so its a good 1,600#'s heavier than your truck. It has a GCWR of 23,000#'s and a GVWR of 10,000#'s. So as you can see they just keep getting stronger, this truck has nearly twice the GCWR of your 92 and they just keep getting stronger.

Chris
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #57  
You are not confused. GCWR =truck plus cargo and trailer max weight.
GVWR=truck plus cargo only.



The reason you truck has such a low GCWR is the 3.55 gear. You did not state what engine it has but I am guessing its a gas truck.

This goes with what I have been saying for a while about the new 1/2 tons. They are much more trucks than the 3/4 tons made 10 plus years ago. For example, my 2007 F-150 SuperCrew 4x4 with 3.73's has a GCWR of 15,000#'s and weighs just shy of 5,700#'s, so it can tow 9,300#'s or 3,000#'s more than your F-250 on paper. It has a GVWR of 7,200#'s so it can haul 1,500#'s in the cab or bed. By the way my tuck actually weighs 5,660#'s with me in it a and 3/4 tank of fuel plus all the stuff that lives in the truck like tow straps, hitches, small tool box, gloves, flash light, ect, ect.

I have a 2004 F-250 4x4 Extended Cab Short Bed with the 6.0 PSD and 3.73's. It weighs 7,600#'s with me, 3/4 tank, and all my junk so its a good 1,600#'s heavier than your truck. It has a GCWR of 23,000#'s and a GVWR of 10,000#'s. So as you can see they just keep getting stronger, this truck has nearly twice the GCWR of your 92 and they just keep getting stronger.

Chris

No, I have the 7.3 diesel. While I agree the 3.55's are a limiting factor, but even with 4.10's I think the GCVR is like 17,000. I agree the new trucks are getting stronger, but that wasn't really what I'm talking about. My point was that the ads are misleading in calling the GCWR the "Max towing compacity" without subtracting the weight of the truck.
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #58  
No, I have the 7.3 diesel. While I agree the 3.55's are a limiting factor, but even with 4.10's I think the GCVR is like 17,000. I agree the new trucks are getting stronger, but that wasn't really what I'm talking about. My point was that the ads are misleading in calling the GCWR the "Max towing compacity" without subtracting the weight of the truck.

Got ya. I get a kick out of the ad's. You really need to educate yourself like you have before buying a vehicle, especially a tow rig. I was doing some research on GM trucks and comparing them to the Fords. The Ford site only list what it does better than the competition, the GM site only brags about what it does better than its competition. You see where this is going. They love to talk about what they do better but fail to mention what they lack in. Someone in marketing is getting paid big $$$$$ to keep the info in there favor.

Chris
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #59  
I love the brochures. They're so full of BS. Read the fine print on those lofty towing & payload numbers (if they are even honest enough to put the fine print on the bottom of the page anymore).

Nothing but asterisks, limitations, "when properly equipped", etc. :rolleyes:

The fact is, no truck buyer would even buy the truck portrayed in the brochures.

I remember Ford bragging the Superduty had the highest towing capacity in its' class. Turns out the truck had to be a regular cab, V-10 gas engine, dually, 4x2 with a manual transmission, single fuel tank and XL trim level.

Virtually nobody buys that truck configuration. 90% of truck buyers buy a Superduty with most of these featues: Diesel engine (reduces capacity) 4x4 (reduces capacity) a crewcab or supercab (reduces capacity) and a higher trim level (reduces capacity).

By the time you purchase most or all those features, payload and towing are significantly reduced. The average guy driving a fancy crewcab diesel 4x4 is not going to be able to tow the numbers quoted in the brochures.
 
   / truck payload rating system in america ? #60  
I don't expect to be maxing out the tow rating at all. If we do trailer the horse, I expect it'll be just the one. Looking at some Exiss aluminum trailers now. Should be ok for short hauls. We'll find out...
Ok, bringing this back up.
With our trailer @ 3200lbs+, loaded with 80 bales of hay and another 26 in the bed of the truck, it towed just fine. I would guess the bales are around 30-40lbs ea. Approximately a 70 mile round trip, mostly highway. 65mph was easy to hold without serious downshifts. I'm pleased.:)
 

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