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I trimmed the pinch welds and heated and bent the fender liner back to prevent rubbing. I'm using +18mm offset, 9" wide wheels with 37x12.50s. I think with your width and offset it's likely to rub the back of the fender wells with 37s when you turn.
Seems reasonable. I don't have any complaints with the Aisin, but it's not my daily driver either. If you go with a 2500 make sure it's got enough payload for your uses. It's shocking low for a HD truck (2k lbs is typical for a ram 2500 diesel 4x4).
You are right on. Stock(ish) tires are probably best for you. Imo either keep it stick or do it right (bigger tires + re-gear). I went for a 3500 SRW HO to avoid the 68 transmission. The Aisin in the HO is super burly. Here in the mountains it's rare that I see a 68 truck with over 100k...
I have a similar use case on my 3500 SRW and went with 37x12.50r17 Falken RT01s. They seem like really durable tires that will survive our rocky Colorado conditions, and still do fine on the road with minimal noise. Aired down to around 20psi on dirt and they ride amazingly well. Personally I...
I went from stock 275/75r18 size tires (Toyo at3) to 37x12.50r17. Assuming both are inflated appropriately for the load the 37s are significantly smoother on the road, and drastically smoother off road when aired down. The additional sidewall plus the improved roll over really makes a...
The Fords are good trucks imo, and if I were after a gasser I'd go for one over the Ram personally. In Diesel I prefer the Ram. In Ram land the 2500s have coil spring rear suspension that can feel a little less stable than leaf springs. It also has relatively low payload. If you want leaf...
Pay close attention to payload rating and make sure it covers your needs with a 2500 diesel. Many are around 2k lbs and it's easy to blow past that even with a small trailer once you also add people, tools, recovery gear, etc.
Imo the big advantage of the 3500 is that you can get the HO and...
The best option for big air power is a pto or engine driven approach. Both can be complicated and expensive. I wanted to be able to air up my 37" tires quickly and mounted an ARB twin compressor under the hood between the battery and firewall. I didn't mount an air tank. It'll fill all four...
Fwiw I am running my skid steer and Ram block heaters off one outlet (via a dual plug kasa smart switch). No problems at all. I'm adding a 10am noco to the skid steer side and will report back if that causes any issues, but I doubt it will. 10amps at 12v is probably only 1.1amps at the outlet.
The 3500 will be more stable without a doubt. The 2500 will ride a little better empty, but with the air assist the 3500 rides pretty darn well. A Megacab diesel is a heavy truck. In 2500 form you will be extremely payload limited. Depending on options etc. I've seen as low as 1600lbs, but...
I didn't get any drops when I installed mine, and it tightened right down with no weirdness. It's been about 2k miles since install and all good so far. Ditto for the rough stuff rear cover.
I drove from Denver to Co Springs and back yesterday, empty on the way down, two trials bikes in the bed on the way back. Smooth both ways. Maybe the Megacab wheelbase is just different enough that it's not impacted? Thuren suspension and 37s don't hurt either.
Imo you could squeak by with a SRW 3500, but really are in DRW territory. Just as a reference I occasionally haul 350 gallons of water, plus tools, containers, recovery gear and five people in my diesel 3500 SRW Megacab with factory air assist. I'm guessing that's a 4100lbs load or so. It is...