B52RAM1500
Member
- Joined
- Jun 2, 2020
- Messages
- 6
- Reaction score
- 5
- Points
- 3
Do 22 inch wheels reduce payload capacity?
How? You’re saying that a 22” rim and tire weighs more than a 20” rim and tire of the same diameter?? Sorry, that’a not meaningful in this context.I agree the 22” wheels will reduce payload, since the added weight counts towards GVWR
How? You’re saying that a 22” rim and tire weighs more than a 20” rim and tire of the same diameter?? Sorry, that’a not meaningful in this context.
My point is, you cannot assume 22” rims and tires weight more than 20s or 18s. Bad assumption. The 22” OEM wheel+tire weighs less than the OEM 18”s with WildPeaks.Say curb weight on 7,100 GVWR truck with 20” wheels is 5,600 lbs, that would mean 1,500 lbs payload (7100 - 5600)
If the 22” wheels weigh 50 lbs more than the 20” wheels, then that would make the curb weight 5,650 lbs, reducing payload to 1,450 lbs. (7100 - 5650)
I have a Laramie Night Edition with the 22s and my truck is rated for 11k lbs towing. 3.92 rears.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
That doesn’t help determine if 22’s cause a reduction in payload capacity
Love posts like this. apparently you do, enough to use your time to come in here just to say that.wgaf
No, I only came to that conclusion after reading through the posts, thanks.Love posts like this. apparently you do, enough to use your time to come in here just to say that.
WelcomeNo, I only came to that conclusion after reading through the posts, thanks.
Thank you! Looking forward to seeing the difference!If you can wait a few weeks, I'll tell you for sure with pics. I ordered a Limited that comes stock with 22's that I'm having the dealer swap with OEM 20's. Gonna sell the 22's. Dealer said they would weigh each wheel and tire and let me know the difference for payload variance. Will pass on. I'm also gonna weigh the 22's at my house before I crate them up to sell/ship. Will take some pics for ya.
Update. Welp...not what I was expecting. Don't have the truck yet but it's ready and the dealer weighed the wheels (wheels + tires) of the 22" take-offs and the 20" (wheels + tires) OEM's that I bought......both weighed 83 lbs...said they weighed them twice after smirking.Thank you! Looking forward to seeing the difference!
Thank you Devin, great info to know!Update. Welp...not what I was expecting. Don't have the truck yet but it's ready and the dealer weighed the wheels (wheels + tires) of the 22" take-offs and the 20" (wheels + tires) OEM's that I bought......both weighed 83 lbs...said they weighed them twice after smirking.
The tires for each are:
48.1 lbs for the 20 " Falken A/T3WA tire 275/55R20
Source: https://www.falkentire.com/tires/light-truck-suv-cuv-tires/wildpeaka/t3w-tire
and
45 lbs for the 22" Goodyear Eagle Touring 285/45R22
Source: https://tiresize.com/tires/Goodyear/Eagle-Touring-285-45R22.htm#:~:text=The 285/45R22 Goodyear Eagle,width of 9.5-10.5".
So that means the wheel-alone weights would be:
83 - 48.1 = 34.9 lbs for the 20" Black OEM wheels that come stock on the Laramie Night Edition with Off-Road Package
and
83 - 45 = 38 lbs for the 22" Black OEM wheels that come stock on the Limited Night Edition (like mine)
So ....final answer would be...NOPE. Payload isn't really affected at all with OEM options in this case, though of course it'll depend on your tire selection. Even then it would be pretty negligible...
I'll still weigh the 22" wheel/tire take-offs when I get them home just to verify what the dealer did. Will reply-back here.