The Ram 2500 has coil springs.FYI, this has nothing to do with coil springs
I see this debate come up a lot, and it's a great example of how vehicle ratings work. People used to point to the Ram 2500's 10,000 lb GVWR and blame the coil springs for being "weak." But the hardware tells a different story.The Ram 2500 has coil springs
The rear coils were part of a 6k rated system before, and are part of a 6k rated system now. I'm not sure what your point is. The axle certification (that doesn't exist) didn't change. The GVWR changed, which means...I see this debate come up a lot, and it's a great example of how vehicle ratings work. People used to point to the Ram 2500's 10,000 lb GVWR and blame the coil springs for being "weak." But the hardware tells a different story.
The REAR COIL springs themselves have always given the axle a 6,040 lb load rating. Combined with the 6,000 lb front axle, the components have a total capacity of 12,040 lbs.
The best part is, Ram recently proved this point for us. On the newer models, they officially raised the GVWR to 11,040 lbs. They achieved this without changing the REAR COIL springs. All they did was certify the existing, capable hardware to a higher number. So yes, the REAR COILS can absolutely handle the weight—and now Ram's own GVWR reflects that reality much more closely.
I think you are missing the forest for the trees, and you actually made my point for me.The rear coils were part of a 6k rated system before, and are part of a 6k rated system now. I'm not sure what your point is. The axle certification (that doesn't exist) didn't change. The GVWR changed, which means...
The truck is now certified to the DOT requirements for a class 3 vehicle instead of a class 2. We always knew the 10k cap was an administrative derate. This is not new news. The GVWR on a 2500 has always been irrelevant because those who needed more could step up to a 3500 SRW for a trivial additional expense.
We also know the 3500 SRW configuration gets a 7k rated rear axle, and we know 6k is less than 7k. Same axle. Same hubs/bearings. Same brakes. Same wheel/tires. Same frame. Only suspension differences. But Ram isn't "certifying" a vehicle according to a back axle rating. They're doing it to a GVWR that places it in a new vehicle classification.
So it does have to do with coil springs. If Ram was comfortable with the 4 link setup at 7k, they'd put it on the 3500 SRW.
I think you're missing the tree (the rear axle tree) for the forest. "Too weak for what" is the question.I think you are missing the forest for the trees, and you actually made my point for me.
You say the 10,000 lb GVWR was always an "administrative derate." I agree. That means the argument that the coil springs were physically too weak was never true.
This debate was never about Class 2 vs. Class 3, or whether a 3500 can haul more. It was about whether the 2500's coils were capable. By raising the GVWR by over 1,000 lbs with the same exact suspension, Ram officially confirms the coils were never the issue...
I have to disagree with your premise that "Nobody ever said the coil springs were too weak/soft to carry 6k."I think you're missing the tree (the rear axle tree) for the forest. "Too weak for what" is the question.
We always knew the diesel 2500's payload rating was artificially low due to the curb weight, which is largely carried on the front axle and counts against the 10k administrative gross rating. We've known this for >25 years of HD diesel pickups from three different manufacturers. We also always knew the back half was strong enough to carry 6k, based on the factory rating.
The rear axle was always rated at 6k-ish. Nobody ever said the coil springs were too weak/soft to carry 6k. That's what they're rated for. This actually proves that Ram's opinion of the rear suspension hasn't changed in 12 years. 6000-6500 RAWR in 2014. 6000-6390 in 2020. Same in 2024. Same now. No change.
My 3500 is rated 6k front, 7k rear, 12,400 total. We've never thought the rear was "too weak" for 7k just because 12,400 < 13,000.
Your bottom line is that in the past, people doubted the 6k rating because of the 10k rating, but now, the 6k rating means something because of the 11k rating.The consistency of the ~6,000 lb rear axle rating proves that Ram has been confident in that coil spring system all along.
BTW, are there any photos of your rig ? Your sig looks impressive with all the modsYour bottom line is that in the past, people doubted the 6k rating because of the 10k rating, but now, the 6k rating means something because of the 11k rating.
I guess now I understand.
There is no SO for the pickups its just one engine so yes the 2500s automatically get the HOI heard a rumor there would be a HO option for the 2500's. I thought maybe this was related somehow?
I thought I had read that the SO was the cummins with the 68rfe (or whatever it's designated as now) versus the HO being a cummins with an Aisin?There is no SO for the pickups its just one engine so yes the 2500s automatically get the HO
Not for 2025+I thought I had read that the SO was the cummins with the 68rfe (or whatever it's designated as now) versus the HO being a cummins with an Aisin?
It's just a mundane, stock looking, low mileage, well maintained, two-tone grandpa truck with chrome bumpers, chrome mirrors, chrome door handles, chrome wheel to wheel running boards, rubber mud flaps, and a 7,000 pound rear axle rating.BTW, are there any photos of your rig ? Your sig looks impressive with all the mods
I thought I had read that the SO was the cummins with the 68rfe (or whatever it's designated as now) versus the HO being a cummins with an Aisin?
Here in Texas I am able to register my 5500's at below their 19,500 lbs GVWR...In Pa the increased gvwr would increase registration fee from $278 to $423 per year. Going from class 4b (up to 11,001 lbs) to class 5 if registered at the max gvwr.
Does PA require registration at GVWR?In Pa the increased gvwr would increase registration fee from $278 to $423 per year. Going from class 4b (up to 11,001 lbs) to class 5 if registered at the max gvwr.