my concern is the size of your rear axel, and brakes. those front caliper bolts snap pretty easy. adding leaf springs and replacing the hard ware is just a band aid. if your going to haul more then 2000lbs you need the truck to do it.
my concern is the size of your rear axel, and brakes. those front caliper bolts snap pretty easy. adding leaf springs and replacing the hard ware is just a band aid. if your going to haul more then 2000lbs you need the truck to do it.
If your concerned about the squat then check out an equalizer hitch, it'll take the weight off the tongue and distribute it evenly.
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I have one.. I followed the instructions to the letter and it does help, but the truck with load is never as "Level" as they show in the etrailer videos. I literally went out there with every measurement, trailer, truck, wheel well, trailer level etc. I still get some squat. I will be honest- I called my local trailer place that I go to and asked if they would take a look at it- they said they didn't have an appt for another MONTH. Which I thought was crap. Hard part of getting there is there HAS to be a car on it to set it properly- with the weight on it- setting it empty you can get close-ish, but you really need a "real world" load on the trailer with the truck. So I still need to ensure THAT is set up correctly as well.
You have the wrong truck for the car scrapping business lol.
I have found a few good 2500hd's for you.If i where you i would get a powerstroke or a cummins
So much bad advise.
Cummins are jokes unless there ISM/ISX motors.
Dirtymaxs are the most car like, but a 6.0 will do the same job at just a little more cost in gas.
Powerstrokes are Junk.
People act like diesels are the end all. Rolling coal is a joke. It means you have a bad tune that is ruining your engine.
There loud, they ride like junk and don't believe the 7-10k oil changes. Its really 3k and at that 3k your replacing 10-15 quarts instead of 6-7.
Parts are a lot more and there mpgs are not what people say.
Sure, on a old 5.9 cummins you might see 18mpg empty. A 7.3 maybe even more with a good tune. Same goes for early gen D-maxs.
The current smoged diesels are junk. Mpgs are barely double digits.
And no, a 6.0 power stroke is not powerful. Its the biggest dog I have ever driven and it returned a best of 15mpg empty on 100 percent highway trips at below 2,000 rpm. And yes I tried different speeds, from 65-80. I finally decided I would rather loose 1mpg and roll 80 and get home sooner.
Your max weight loaded on the trailer is at most, what 8,000 pounds?
This is on a trailer with what I will assume has one set of trailer brakes. It should stop just fine for that weight.
Get new springs, and if that doesnt help (it will) try air bags.
And I have never seen anyone replace LEAF SRINGS with COILOVERS for better load capacity. If you ran true coil overs one the rear of your truck you would have too weld mounts, probley in side the bed just too make them work.
Not trying too sound like a ****. But I will assume its coming off that way but I will assume the "diesel boys" will have much too say.
Last edited by Mechanic688; 10-30-2013 at 01:32 AM. Reason: eliminate snipe
Sal.. No offense from me on this. I appreciate any/all opinions.
--Basically I have ordered a set of 4/1 Leaf Springs to install on the truck. Weight rating on them is 2025 lbs per spring vs my current 2/1 leafs that are rated at 1500 lbs each.
-- My shocks are a recently replaced set of Monroe Sensatrac's all the way around the truck- I'm going to stay with them to see how they pair with the new Leaf Springs I ordered. Hoping they might balance it out well. (Since the Leafs carry the weight and the shocks just try to absorb any road bump.. seemed logical to keep the "softer" shocks while beefing up the leaf springs since that is what carry's the weight and not the shocks i.e. coil overs)
-- My trailer is one of those older iron horses. It is a 1995 "Jersey" brand Trailer- it weighs nearly 2000 lbs on its own.
-- Trailer Brakes: Yes, it is a dual axle trailer with all 4 wheels having brakes. They were recently checked and wired to work as the previous owner of the trailer decided to only have a brake on 1 of the 4 (Blew my truck brakes finding this out)
So for now, I am going to beef the rear-end of my 5.3L half ton and see how she does. My truck has the 3.73 gears so they are built for hauling heavier loads and it does tow really well, just trying to get her to the point I don't feel like I'm going to worry about wearing her out and balance the load better.
I'm certain you will get some chime in here. Know that I appreciate your candor.
Last edited by sledge; 10-29-2013 at 08:53 PM.
Sal seems too me like you dont know what you are talking about.
Sledge i am thinking of in about 6 months or so getting me a f-450 powerstroke.So i can haul 3 cars at once.
I would love a dodge 4500 but i cant afford a 07 or newer truck lol.
Why run a diesel, when I average 5-10 gals of reclaimed fuel from every car I pickup. If I had to travel 10 miles to get it and there's 5 gallons of gas in the car, I'm gas ahead. Ive burnt many gallons of recycled fuel, the only downside is after a year or better, gas really looses its whammy. I've driven diesels hauling cattle and admit the power is awesome, but for the price of one reman injector pump or injectors I can afford to buy Lots of gas and spark plugs ! Besides that I run whatever sbc motor I can find, which is what I'm running now, and have several spares if I need em. Paid 350 for the truck I pulled my motor from, sold trany and transfer case for 550, scrapped the rest and had a small block to boot, remind me again how a diesel is cheaper.
Alvord iron and salvage
3rd generation scrapper and dam proud of it
Yes i agree on the free gas.I just hauled a car in with a half a tank.That is reason i was thinking about getting a v10.But on the trailer gas would be a pain to drain.If i had a lift then i would drain a crap ton of gas.
Yes diesel parts are expensive but last a whole lot longer.So when your gas truck reaches 300k you have done had the motor rebuilt or a new motor put in and how many other gas failures have happened who knows.
Also diesel are built for heavy towing so if you tow alot a diesel is for you and it will get 5-10 more mpgs towing than that gas truck will.
I would like to see the proof on the 5-10 mpgs while towing ! Yeah a diesel can run to a million miles but at 300k the rest of the truck will be need rebuilt anyhow, besides that I never keep a pickup longer than 4 years so I don't really care if it will run to 2 million miles.
I've seen many gassers run to 300k without any problems, my father in law's 99 Chevy has 302k on it and never been touched, not even a water pump ! My old boss man sold a 95 Chevy that had 350k on it, never been touched either, to a guy who still drives it, and that was 5 years ago !
Last edited by taterjuice; 10-30-2013 at 11:21 AM.
Thats why i drive the truck i drive....got a good deal on mine. she's old and hauls. but i couldn't say no to the 4500 to take it home. maybe in a couple years I'll look for a new truck. but i think a hook lift would be smart. to me a good work truck is one that works. and one your not scared to scratch the paint on.
Ok case in had John has a 08 v10 truck gets 10 mpgs doing whatever.My truck empty on the highway gets 19-21mpg and loaded pulling 12k lbs with a messed up speedo gets 14.5.Also not keeping something for more than 4 years.Why not if it is paid for and making you money and is good then why go to something else.
Yeah a gasser going to 300k is far and few between and no the rest of the truck would be fine if you do the proper upkeep which is no different than a gasser.You need to read up on diesel towing mgp vs a gasser towing mpgs lol.
Find me a trany that goes to 300k without needed rebuilt, A front end that doesn't need ball joints at 300 k, transfer cases, clutches, none of them will go that far. You diesel boys HAVE to run em that just to recoup your initial investment, I want to own a pickup not be married to it! Twenty mpgs ? What going downhill with 30 mile an hour wind at back in georgia overdrive ? What about the additional cost during winter time ? Powerservice and electricity, they still arent free ! I've never plugged mine in and can't remember it ever gelling up. Not to mention winter fuel looses power which lowers mileage, maybe you should read up on that, lmao !
Seems to me that you just dont like diesel.a 300k tranny front end ball joints,transfer cases,clutches no different than on a gas truck but they wont even still make it anywhere near that lol.Yes 20mpg my truck on interstate driving will go 670 miles on 32 gallons you do the math.In the winter i have a older dodge never plug it in will start just fine.Let it run 5 minutes and its good to go.You plug them in then that means you get in and go.My mileage doesnt change from the summer to the winter sorry.Seems like you need to learn more about what you are talking about.
Also the newer diesels dont have to be plugged in at all.
Last edited by Focker; 10-31-2013 at 11:36 AM.
I work on diesels, day in and day out, as well as gassers. And sold quite a bit of fuel, close to half million gallons last year, and beleive me winter blended fuel does NOT get the mileage like summer fuel. And you don't run powerservice in the winter ? That stuff ain't exactly cheap, it all figures in to the cost per mile. Ive sold twice of much as fuel than most people will ever use, don't believe I'm the one who's lacking in knowledge here.
Last edited by taterjuice; 10-31-2013 at 12:05 PM.
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