Schreibdave
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This will be a tough question for people to answer but I would appreciate any insight.
I have not bought the truck yet so this is planning for the future. I want a 2025 1500, either a Big Horn or Larimie. The truck will be a Crew cab with the longer bed and SO Hurricaine engine. It will have a cap with side doors for tools and supplies. It might have a Decked pull out drawer system and maybe a Cargo Glide pull out bed. I'm thinking the cap, bed slide and drawers might be 1000 lbs before I put anything in the truck. If I load up the bed with my daily load of power tools, fasteners, drywall mud, paint cans, etc it seems I could be at 1500 lbs before I add a single piece of sheetrock or a 2x4. I think the standard payload for this configuration is about 2000 lbs.
If I wanted more payload capacity on this truck, what would I need to do? Driving it every day near it's capacity seems like a recipe for breaking or wearing out rear suspension parts. Thanks in advance.
Edit: My current truck is a 2016 F150 with the 3.5L Ecoboost and the Heavy Duty Payload Package which raises the payload to 2600 lbs. The current truck has the cap, sliding bed, and decked drawers. It's a former cable company service vehicle and came that way when I bought it last year. This set up seems to hold up well.
I have not bought the truck yet so this is planning for the future. I want a 2025 1500, either a Big Horn or Larimie. The truck will be a Crew cab with the longer bed and SO Hurricaine engine. It will have a cap with side doors for tools and supplies. It might have a Decked pull out drawer system and maybe a Cargo Glide pull out bed. I'm thinking the cap, bed slide and drawers might be 1000 lbs before I put anything in the truck. If I load up the bed with my daily load of power tools, fasteners, drywall mud, paint cans, etc it seems I could be at 1500 lbs before I add a single piece of sheetrock or a 2x4. I think the standard payload for this configuration is about 2000 lbs.
If I wanted more payload capacity on this truck, what would I need to do? Driving it every day near it's capacity seems like a recipe for breaking or wearing out rear suspension parts. Thanks in advance.
Edit: My current truck is a 2016 F150 with the 3.5L Ecoboost and the Heavy Duty Payload Package which raises the payload to 2600 lbs. The current truck has the cap, sliding bed, and decked drawers. It's a former cable company service vehicle and came that way when I bought it last year. This set up seems to hold up well.
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