just add some air bags, we did that on our 04 superduty and problem solved, btw total wieght loaded was up around 31k+ at some points hauling a 53 foot car hauler trailer
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It may be able to pull the wieght OK, but the problem is when you need to stop. IMO
What about the axle? That is a huge limiting factor in towing ability.
this is the most important thing. And yes unless he did a bed conversion that is F350. The axles for most of fords superduty trucks are all 9" rears arent they? Or some version Dana rearend? It the suspension and framework that mostly differentiates the vehicle weights. And both 250 and 350 are one ton trucks. The dually allowed even more weight due to distribution. Least thats what I told people when I sold them. I coulda been wrong.
3. Both the GMC3500 and the Dodge3500 could pull the same load. Do you seriously think Ford make some magical truck that is far superior to anything else made?
I think most Ford duallys have a Sterling 10-3/4 rear end.
Both? Possibly you just haven't had the inevitable happen yet? Even Peterbilts have limits. Even if they are in excess of 85k pounds.
yeah did i mention tha old man didnt even have trailer brakes!!
1. SKIDDER not skitter learn how to spell
2. It's a 350 not a 250
4. I come from the Lumber industry, there is no way that skidder weighs close to 25,000lbs
I am aware of that. I drive truck. I was referring to single trailer. Also, the weight you are referring to is a combined weight, meaning the unladen weight of the tractor and trailer is included. I have a doubles/triples endorsement and had to know all that crap to get it. The purpose of doubles is normally to have one driver make two different stops on the same trip. They are almost never a full load.85,000lb is dick all for a Class 8. Some provinces up here allow LCV's to pull Turnpike Doubles that approach 150,000lb. Road trains in Australia are commonly well over the 100 tonne mark.
85,000lb is dick all for a Class 8. Some provinces up here allow LCV's to pull Turnpike Doubles that approach 150,000lb. Road trains in Australia are commonly well over the 100 tonne mark.
It all comes down to the number of axles.
Interesting... i didnt know this. Nor did i know the ambulance facts.
I will say it is magical. Its a ford LOL. they are rated for the best pulling.
I think most Ford duallys have a Sterling 10-3/4 rear end.
very good point. isnt there some kinda commercial tax thing due to the weigght class too?10.5 sterling in the new trucks
10.25 sterling in the older ones.
in the state of OH (possibly in all 50 states) they intentionally rated the the larger f-series trucks at 19,999 towing capacity to avoid the possibility of a person driving CDL weight without breaking the weight cap. often times things get rated the way they do for a "safety" reason, not a truck capability reason.
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