Dog Hauler
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My new 1500 Limited should have its picture in the dictionary next to Irony.
I tow a trailer quite a bit. Many short tows under 100 miles and numerous longer tows between 200 - 2000 miles round trip. Trailer is 7500 pounds loaded and likes 1100 pounds tongue weight to be nice and stable. No weight distributor, at least not yet.
My former tow vehicle was a Mercedes GL350 (diesel) with air suspension:
When I bought the Merc, I didn't pay attention to any of the weight limits except the 7500 max trailer weight limit. Okay, fine. My fault. And my trailer ended up being heavier than I thought and right at the Mercedes' limit towing capacity. Regardless, it's the trailer I had and the tow vehicle I had. It wasn't feasible to change out either one so I used the Merc to tow the trailer for maybe 15,000 miles, all the while being at nearly 2x the tongue weight limit and 400 lbs over the max cargo weight.
Here's the thing: the Merc cheerfully soldiered on through every single mile with not even a hint of complaint from the air suspension*. I could adjust it at will up or down and it never had a mechanical issue. But I always had it in the back of my mind that I'm over the tongue weight limit by 2x. Sure, a large safety margin is always engineered into stuff like that but 2x? I never considered the cargo weight limit until reading about it on this forum after getting my Limited or I would have had that nagging little voice in the back of my head, as well.
So, when it came time for a new tow vehicle, I thought I'd step up to a "real" tow vehicle...you know, something manly...and not have to suppress the little voices. Oh, happy days! The Ram 1500 seemed like just the ticket. Great ride (for a pickup truck), looks great, luxurious interior and a bed rather than the enclosed back of an SUV would generally be an advantage in my application. And it cost a whole lot less than another Merc, to boot.
As with the Merc, I looked at max trailer weight. 11,xxx pounds for the new Ram with eTorque and 3.92s. Yay! Plenty and then some. Unlike the Merc, I also looked at max tongue weight. Again, yay! 1200 lbs for the RAM (that's my recollection of tongue weight, although a search just now failed to find a tongue weight for the 1500 eTorque). Plenty and then some once again. Life was about to get really good, towing-wise. Okay, fine, once again my fault for not looking at the cargo weight limit.
Here are the numbers on the Ram:
But no. Life pretty much sucks towing-wise with the Ram. My limited really doesn't like 1100 pounds of tongue weight. Hates it, in fact. At that number, my cargo weight is around 1600 lbs. More if you tack on fuel and vehicle options, which as I understand it count as cargo weight. While the air suspension will level thusly loaded, it won't adjust up or down with the dashboard switch. If I try, I get an error message to the effect "Payload exceeded" or some such.
Let me see if I have this straight: Max cargo weight is 1284 according the sticker on the door jam and allowable tongue weight is 1200 pounds? So that means if I tow with the max tongue weight of 1200 pounds, I must slim down to 84 pounds, drive a completely unoptioned Limited, run on fumes so the fuel doesn't add to cargo weight and don't have even a cup of coffee on board to stay within the max cargo weight? That can't be right. Going with my 1100 lbs tongue weight, I at least don't have to lose weight to concentration camp levels, but I still have to run on fumes and can't have a cup of coffee on board my completely unoptioned Limited.
That can't be. Someone please tell me that my arithmetic is wrong.
Unless I goofed somewhere in my calculations, and the error message I get about my cargo weight exceeding max tells me I didn't, the bottom line is that (irony alert) my manly-man pick up truck is in practical terms far less capable than my girly Merc SUV. Double irony alert: At least I get only 9 mpg while towing with my Ram compared to 14 with the Merc**
I expect all manner of haters out there will jump on me for overloading the Ram, not to mention the Merc. But stow it. Okay, fine. I'm overloading the vehicles, risking my life. Risking your life and being a general menace to society. I should be locked up forever, have my knee caps broken then drawn and quartered. That's not the point. The point is that the wimpy Merc tows better than the He-man Ram truck and the Merc is overloaded more than the Ram. Who would have thought?
*Stopping distances fully loaded were fine, as were handling characteristics despite the tongue weight and cargo capacity overload.
**Although the total fuel expense is usually but not always partially offset by the less expensive price of mid-grade gas compared to diesel.
I tow a trailer quite a bit. Many short tows under 100 miles and numerous longer tows between 200 - 2000 miles round trip. Trailer is 7500 pounds loaded and likes 1100 pounds tongue weight to be nice and stable. No weight distributor, at least not yet.
My former tow vehicle was a Mercedes GL350 (diesel) with air suspension:
- Max trailer weight allowed: 7500 pounds.
- Max tongue weight allowed: 600 pounds. Yes, you read that right, 600 pounds.
- Max cargo weight allowed: 1179 lbs.
When I bought the Merc, I didn't pay attention to any of the weight limits except the 7500 max trailer weight limit. Okay, fine. My fault. And my trailer ended up being heavier than I thought and right at the Mercedes' limit towing capacity. Regardless, it's the trailer I had and the tow vehicle I had. It wasn't feasible to change out either one so I used the Merc to tow the trailer for maybe 15,000 miles, all the while being at nearly 2x the tongue weight limit and 400 lbs over the max cargo weight.
Here's the thing: the Merc cheerfully soldiered on through every single mile with not even a hint of complaint from the air suspension*. I could adjust it at will up or down and it never had a mechanical issue. But I always had it in the back of my mind that I'm over the tongue weight limit by 2x. Sure, a large safety margin is always engineered into stuff like that but 2x? I never considered the cargo weight limit until reading about it on this forum after getting my Limited or I would have had that nagging little voice in the back of my head, as well.
So, when it came time for a new tow vehicle, I thought I'd step up to a "real" tow vehicle...you know, something manly...and not have to suppress the little voices. Oh, happy days! The Ram 1500 seemed like just the ticket. Great ride (for a pickup truck), looks great, luxurious interior and a bed rather than the enclosed back of an SUV would generally be an advantage in my application. And it cost a whole lot less than another Merc, to boot.
As with the Merc, I looked at max trailer weight. 11,xxx pounds for the new Ram with eTorque and 3.92s. Yay! Plenty and then some. Unlike the Merc, I also looked at max tongue weight. Again, yay! 1200 lbs for the RAM (that's my recollection of tongue weight, although a search just now failed to find a tongue weight for the 1500 eTorque). Plenty and then some once again. Life was about to get really good, towing-wise. Okay, fine, once again my fault for not looking at the cargo weight limit.
Here are the numbers on the Ram:
- Max trailer weight 11,xxx pounds.
- Max tongue weight 1200 pounds.
- Max cargo weight 1284 lbs.
But no. Life pretty much sucks towing-wise with the Ram. My limited really doesn't like 1100 pounds of tongue weight. Hates it, in fact. At that number, my cargo weight is around 1600 lbs. More if you tack on fuel and vehicle options, which as I understand it count as cargo weight. While the air suspension will level thusly loaded, it won't adjust up or down with the dashboard switch. If I try, I get an error message to the effect "Payload exceeded" or some such.
Let me see if I have this straight: Max cargo weight is 1284 according the sticker on the door jam and allowable tongue weight is 1200 pounds? So that means if I tow with the max tongue weight of 1200 pounds, I must slim down to 84 pounds, drive a completely unoptioned Limited, run on fumes so the fuel doesn't add to cargo weight and don't have even a cup of coffee on board to stay within the max cargo weight? That can't be right. Going with my 1100 lbs tongue weight, I at least don't have to lose weight to concentration camp levels, but I still have to run on fumes and can't have a cup of coffee on board my completely unoptioned Limited.
That can't be. Someone please tell me that my arithmetic is wrong.
Unless I goofed somewhere in my calculations, and the error message I get about my cargo weight exceeding max tells me I didn't, the bottom line is that (irony alert) my manly-man pick up truck is in practical terms far less capable than my girly Merc SUV. Double irony alert: At least I get only 9 mpg while towing with my Ram compared to 14 with the Merc**
I expect all manner of haters out there will jump on me for overloading the Ram, not to mention the Merc. But stow it. Okay, fine. I'm overloading the vehicles, risking my life. Risking your life and being a general menace to society. I should be locked up forever, have my knee caps broken then drawn and quartered. That's not the point. The point is that the wimpy Merc tows better than the He-man Ram truck and the Merc is overloaded more than the Ram. Who would have thought?
*Stopping distances fully loaded were fine, as were handling characteristics despite the tongue weight and cargo capacity overload.
**Although the total fuel expense is usually but not always partially offset by the less expensive price of mid-grade gas compared to diesel.