Member III
Has anyone ever thought about their Gross Vehicle Weight Rating?
My previous 2002 4Runner, with armor, dual batteries, 33s, fridge, compressor, and full drawers weighed about 4900 lbs with a full tank of gas (verified via scommercial scales). Gross Vehicle Weight Rating was 5250 lbs, technically leaving me a max of 350 lbs for all passengers and additional cargo, or about 150lbs or so after accounting for me and my daily backpack. Hah! Evacuating for the hurricane, I easily had 400lbs of gear, water, and gasoline in it, and not too long before I sold it, I had it loaded with 700lbs of mulch bags :P .
It wasnt until we made the decision to pursue living full-time in an Airstream travel trailer that I got my F250, which led me to the towing and hauling circles where GVWR and GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating -- i.e. including a trailer) can actually be quite important.
Now I have a whole spreadsheet to help me calculate the effects of various mods and loads on my F250's front and GAW (Gross Axle Weight) and GVW. Funny enough, on most vehicles GVWR and GAWRs are far less than you'd think. That is, you expect to be able to load every seat with adults and the trunk or cargo space full of luggage and be fine, but you are probably exceeding factory limits. A stock 4x4 3rd Gen 4Runner is about 4000lbs--if you put five 200lb adults in there plus a week's worth if luggage for each of them and a cooler full of beer, that 5250lb creeps up fast. Start adding bigger tires, maybe a little armor or recovery gear, and it gets even worse.
Even in my F250 with its 3400lb total payload capacity, if I put 6 adults in its 6 legal seats I could easily exceed the front GAWR sticker (granted, this rating is pretty arbitrary for the Ford Super Duty trucks, as all the running gear is explicitely rated to much higher in the literature).
So, has anyone ever thought about this? I am absolutely not trying to warn anyone or anything. Yes, in relatively obvious or extreme cases there have been legitimate criminal or civil consequences (i.e. grossly exceeding limits and being sued in civil court after a bad accident, or rare cases of being fined for exceeding GCWR during random scale checks). That said, while I now intend to be deliberate in not exceeding major weight limits, I do think some of the fears are a bit overblown. And, to be honest, with the right equipment I probably still wouldnt give it a 2nd thought if I had another 4Runner.
View attachment 81344
My previous 2002 4Runner, with armor, dual batteries, 33s, fridge, compressor, and full drawers weighed about 4900 lbs with a full tank of gas (verified via scommercial scales). Gross Vehicle Weight Rating was 5250 lbs, technically leaving me a max of 350 lbs for all passengers and additional cargo, or about 150lbs or so after accounting for me and my daily backpack. Hah! Evacuating for the hurricane, I easily had 400lbs of gear, water, and gasoline in it, and not too long before I sold it, I had it loaded with 700lbs of mulch bags :P .
It wasnt until we made the decision to pursue living full-time in an Airstream travel trailer that I got my F250, which led me to the towing and hauling circles where GVWR and GCWR (Gross Combined Weight Rating -- i.e. including a trailer) can actually be quite important.
Now I have a whole spreadsheet to help me calculate the effects of various mods and loads on my F250's front and GAW (Gross Axle Weight) and GVW. Funny enough, on most vehicles GVWR and GAWRs are far less than you'd think. That is, you expect to be able to load every seat with adults and the trunk or cargo space full of luggage and be fine, but you are probably exceeding factory limits. A stock 4x4 3rd Gen 4Runner is about 4000lbs--if you put five 200lb adults in there plus a week's worth if luggage for each of them and a cooler full of beer, that 5250lb creeps up fast. Start adding bigger tires, maybe a little armor or recovery gear, and it gets even worse.
Even in my F250 with its 3400lb total payload capacity, if I put 6 adults in its 6 legal seats I could easily exceed the front GAWR sticker (granted, this rating is pretty arbitrary for the Ford Super Duty trucks, as all the running gear is explicitely rated to much higher in the literature).
So, has anyone ever thought about this? I am absolutely not trying to warn anyone or anything. Yes, in relatively obvious or extreme cases there have been legitimate criminal or civil consequences (i.e. grossly exceeding limits and being sued in civil court after a bad accident, or rare cases of being fined for exceeding GCWR during random scale checks). That said, while I now intend to be deliberate in not exceeding major weight limits, I do think some of the fears are a bit overblown. And, to be honest, with the right equipment I probably still wouldnt give it a 2nd thought if I had another 4Runner.
View attachment 81344
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