Hey guys, newbie here! I’m upgrading from a 2018 Tundra that has a full-time slide-in camper in the bed. I was on a Cat scale for the first time the other day and was shocked to learn I’m WAY over (8560 pounds) its GVWR (7100 pounds). It has served me well, but I’d rather sell it and recoup some cash to upgrade to a HD truck, than to snap it in half and be sad.
I spend a lot of time off road with my camper. I like to find little twisty forest service spur roads that have seldom-used flat-ish spots to camp and not see anybody for days and days. I love the solitude. I scrape the hell out of my truck bashing through branches and bushes on trails that were meant for much narrower vehicles. I don’t go fast or do rock-crawling or anything crazy, but I spend lots of time on Sierra Nevada forest service roads, less-frequented Death Valley / Inyo roads, and sketchy old mining roads. For this, my Tundra with 2.5” lift and 33” tires has served me well.
Now, I am having a hard time coming to terms with losing the maneuverability, tight fits, and offroad capabilities of the Tundra, but I have to acknowledge the payload capacity issue.
In looking at the various 0-5 year old HD offerings from Ram, GM, Ford, I couldn’t help but notice how BIG some of the trucks are! They are so tall! I don’t really want a big truck. I just want a truck that is engineered for a 2500+ pound payload, and can perform reasonably offroad. I guess you could say I’m looking for the smallest, big truck.
To this end, I read that the 2019+ Ram HDs are dimensionally smaller than the equivalent Ford / GM HD trucks because the HD Rams still use the older, 4th generation cabs. The example given was that a shortbed crew cab Ram 2500 wheelbase is 10” shorter than equivalent Ford/GM truck.
Is this true? Have I found my small, big truck in the Ram HD?
I spend a lot of time off road with my camper. I like to find little twisty forest service spur roads that have seldom-used flat-ish spots to camp and not see anybody for days and days. I love the solitude. I scrape the hell out of my truck bashing through branches and bushes on trails that were meant for much narrower vehicles. I don’t go fast or do rock-crawling or anything crazy, but I spend lots of time on Sierra Nevada forest service roads, less-frequented Death Valley / Inyo roads, and sketchy old mining roads. For this, my Tundra with 2.5” lift and 33” tires has served me well.
Now, I am having a hard time coming to terms with losing the maneuverability, tight fits, and offroad capabilities of the Tundra, but I have to acknowledge the payload capacity issue.
In looking at the various 0-5 year old HD offerings from Ram, GM, Ford, I couldn’t help but notice how BIG some of the trucks are! They are so tall! I don’t really want a big truck. I just want a truck that is engineered for a 2500+ pound payload, and can perform reasonably offroad. I guess you could say I’m looking for the smallest, big truck.
To this end, I read that the 2019+ Ram HDs are dimensionally smaller than the equivalent Ford / GM HD trucks because the HD Rams still use the older, 4th generation cabs. The example given was that a shortbed crew cab Ram 2500 wheelbase is 10” shorter than equivalent Ford/GM truck.
Is this true? Have I found my small, big truck in the Ram HD?