Enthusiast II
- 1,009
- First Name
- Braden
- Last Name
- Bartlett
- Member #
-
22699
- Ham/GMRS Callsign
- KJ7OHT
I've just started becoming conscious about the weight that I'm carrying on my rig. I have grand plans: bumper, winch, RTT, bed rack... all the stuff you see on kick-ass YouTube videos.
Well.. tomorrow I'm taking my family on a really simple overnight trip. I decided to start adding things up. Currently I just have RCI steel rock sliders and steel skid plates (engine, transmission, t-case, rear diff). What I found shocked me. With my family of 4 and my dog loaded up, we only have about 100 lbs left before we hit GVWR. Water alone is going to account for half of that.
This sucks. I'm feeling stupid for not doing this math before I bought my truck, but at the same time this is the truck I've always wanted: long before I ever even heard the term "overlanding." I'm now in the position of having to run at or over GVWR or pulling off my armor. I considered switching to aluminum skids but I'd only save 50 lbs. I mean... that's a lot, but it's not really _the_ issue. I feel like I'm having to make a big decision about how my build progresses:
1) Never touch difficult terrain - remove the skid plates entirely and save 140 lbs.
2) Buy something else - sell my beloved, brand-new Tacoma and get something that can load a few hundred more pounds; the 4Runner can carry more, the Ranger can carry more. None of them are the vehicle I _want_. I would also lose a lot of money doing this.
3) Buy a trailer - still running at GVWR, but at least you can carry all your gear in a trailer (looking at at least $8k for a new trailer, but could buy a beater for much less that isn't quite as nice).
4) Go solo - I can have it all! I just have to have it all without my family. This isn't really an option I want to consider unless I'm willing to build out a higher payload family rig.
Right now I'm leaning towards #1 followed by #3 because the used trailer market looks... not great... and I am not really wanting to lose a bunch of money.
Well.. tomorrow I'm taking my family on a really simple overnight trip. I decided to start adding things up. Currently I just have RCI steel rock sliders and steel skid plates (engine, transmission, t-case, rear diff). What I found shocked me. With my family of 4 and my dog loaded up, we only have about 100 lbs left before we hit GVWR. Water alone is going to account for half of that.
This sucks. I'm feeling stupid for not doing this math before I bought my truck, but at the same time this is the truck I've always wanted: long before I ever even heard the term "overlanding." I'm now in the position of having to run at or over GVWR or pulling off my armor. I considered switching to aluminum skids but I'd only save 50 lbs. I mean... that's a lot, but it's not really _the_ issue. I feel like I'm having to make a big decision about how my build progresses:
1) Never touch difficult terrain - remove the skid plates entirely and save 140 lbs.
2) Buy something else - sell my beloved, brand-new Tacoma and get something that can load a few hundred more pounds; the 4Runner can carry more, the Ranger can carry more. None of them are the vehicle I _want_. I would also lose a lot of money doing this.
3) Buy a trailer - still running at GVWR, but at least you can carry all your gear in a trailer (looking at at least $8k for a new trailer, but could buy a beater for much less that isn't quite as nice).
4) Go solo - I can have it all! I just have to have it all without my family. This isn't really an option I want to consider unless I'm willing to build out a higher payload family rig.
Right now I'm leaning towards #1 followed by #3 because the used trailer market looks... not great... and I am not really wanting to lose a bunch of money.