The charts are not for a specific truck.
The only thing you need from the chart is GCWR! Gross Combined Weight Rating!
Do you have 3.21 or 3.92 gears?
3.21. GCWR is 13900
3.92. GCWR is 17000
All the other information is on your door jamb.
GVWR and Payload.
So you look at your door Jamb. 7100 GVWR. Your payload will be specific...but it is a 1500 truck so for the sake of science....1500 Payload.
GVWR minus Payload equals base weight.
Base weight is an empty truck with a full tank of gas.
7100-1500=5600
GCWR minus base weight equals max trailering.
Max trailering is the weight left over for a trailer(it's tongue weight) driver and hitch.
Let's say you got 3.92
17000-5600=11400
See why the max number given in charts is wrong. There is still a good bit of subtraction to do to get that truck and trailer connected and down the road.
So, 11400. You got to subtract you. I weigh 300lbs dressed for work. A weight distribution hitch weighs about 100lbs. So we are at 11000lbs.
Now tongue weight. A camper, travel trailer, whatever your area calls it...has a tongue weight of about 12 to 15%. The charts and configurators only use 10% if any.
So your truck now also only has 1100lbs of payload left.
So, an equipment trailer with a 10%TW or a smaller driver and you could tow 11k.
But an 11k camper would be too much TW on the truck. Make sense.
A common GVWR for a trailer is 8800 pounds. At 13% that is 1144 pounds of TW. Too much, but you could probably do it....but remember...just 300lbs in the truck.
So 7500. TW @13% is 975. Now you can take something extra with you.
It is simple math. No chart or configurator needed.
You now have all the numbers you need.
Do people tow big campers...sure! But, this is the math to be in compliance.
Gross Axle Rating is also needed, it is on the door jamb, but you rarely get near it with a properly loaded appropriate trailer.
The first thing you need to do is decide which camp you fall in. The best camp to be in is to own neither the truck or the camper. This allows you to research and keep feelings out of your decision. This allows you to easily sit back and learn the process. The next camp is owning the truck or...
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