SirHobgoblin
Active Member
- Joined
- Mar 11, 2022
- Messages
- 68
- Reaction score
- 62
- Points
- 18
- Age
- 45
Hello everyone,
I apologize for posting another 3.21 vs 3.92 gear ratio thread. I am new to towing, and although I have done my best to do the necessary research, I would sincerely appreciate your collective opinions. I plan to submit a build-to-order, in the coming days, for either a Ram 1500 Limited Longhorn or Limited trim. I am making a base assumption that these two trims will weigh the same, as I plan to spec them out the same. I plan to avoid a panoramic moon roof and go with a the V8 etorque engine. 4x4, air suspension (maybe), trailer-tow group, etc. I would appreciate your thoughts on which gear ratio, 3.21 vs 3.92, will best suite out needs, based on the below assumptions and scenario:
The primary use for this truck will be some commuting (90% highway via I-95, heavy traffic), lots a traveling (mountains included), and towing a travel trailer. We also plan to move to a more mountainous area in a few years.
-Assuming a payload of ~1400lbs, based on post here and vin-based tow rating for similarly built models.
-Estimating passenger/cargo load of 500lbs (myself, wife, 3 dogs, plus a little extra to account for random items)
-Estimating a max tongue weight of 900 lbs, based on the above weights.
-Assuming a tongue weight that is equal to 10-15% of the total trailer weight, the trailer GVWR max can range from 5400lbs - 9000lbs.
The 3.21 gear ratio would be good for all but high end (10% tongue, 9000lb GVWR) of the above towing/payload capacity range. Assuming that the trailer lands in the 6000-7200 lb range, which would be the better gear ratio? I am leaning towards the 3.92, but I would appreciate the extra fuel efficiency for normal commuting. I am assuming a 1-2 MPG difference, which isn't a deal breaker, but given that my payload limits total towing capacity, I don't want to opt out of the extra efficiency unncessarily.
TL
R - is a 3.92 ratio necessary/worth the loss in MPG to tow a 6000-7200 lbs travel trailer (payload is the limiting factor).
I appreciate the help!
I apologize for posting another 3.21 vs 3.92 gear ratio thread. I am new to towing, and although I have done my best to do the necessary research, I would sincerely appreciate your collective opinions. I plan to submit a build-to-order, in the coming days, for either a Ram 1500 Limited Longhorn or Limited trim. I am making a base assumption that these two trims will weigh the same, as I plan to spec them out the same. I plan to avoid a panoramic moon roof and go with a the V8 etorque engine. 4x4, air suspension (maybe), trailer-tow group, etc. I would appreciate your thoughts on which gear ratio, 3.21 vs 3.92, will best suite out needs, based on the below assumptions and scenario:
The primary use for this truck will be some commuting (90% highway via I-95, heavy traffic), lots a traveling (mountains included), and towing a travel trailer. We also plan to move to a more mountainous area in a few years.
-Assuming a payload of ~1400lbs, based on post here and vin-based tow rating for similarly built models.
-Estimating passenger/cargo load of 500lbs (myself, wife, 3 dogs, plus a little extra to account for random items)
-Estimating a max tongue weight of 900 lbs, based on the above weights.
-Assuming a tongue weight that is equal to 10-15% of the total trailer weight, the trailer GVWR max can range from 5400lbs - 9000lbs.
The 3.21 gear ratio would be good for all but high end (10% tongue, 9000lb GVWR) of the above towing/payload capacity range. Assuming that the trailer lands in the 6000-7200 lb range, which would be the better gear ratio? I am leaning towards the 3.92, but I would appreciate the extra fuel efficiency for normal commuting. I am assuming a 1-2 MPG difference, which isn't a deal breaker, but given that my payload limits total towing capacity, I don't want to opt out of the extra efficiency unncessarily.
TL

I appreciate the help!