dnw64
Veteran Member
Taco Wagon = 7540 pounds.
That salada tacos!
Taco Wagon = 7540 pounds.
Your GVWR and axle weights should be OK, but your trailer and GCWR are not.
An excerpt from a 2009 Chevy truck owner's manual:
View attachment 617975
I've got one & it was great for figuring things out. I rarely use it now as I've marked ballance/loading points & validated how much things sag at proper loading.You either need to get a Sherline tongue weight scale or when you were at the truck stop scale, unhitch the trailer and go back through the scale with just the truck. That way you can tell how much the tongue weight actually is. That would have given you all your answers. Usually a 2nd weigh in at the truck scale is much cheaper than the initial weigh in.
When I registered my truck in Texas I had a weight slip from the CAT scale with me, but they used the mfgr stated weight of 6300# (6.7 diesel 4x4 crew cab short bed) The CAT scale said 8200# with all the bells & whistles from the factory, full fuel, plus an aux fuel tank and tool box. Doesn't leave much room for a cargo. Door sticker says GVWR 10,000#You should always read "up to" as "less than" because of various options on a vehicle. TV hype makes good use of "up to", but when many of the actual figures come out, you hear all the gasps and complaints.
Not that they ever bother trucks that size but if you ever got pulled over they'd go by the weight on their scales, not what it says on the registration.When I registered my truck in Texas I had a weight slip from the CAT scale with me, but they used the mfgr stated weight of 6300# (6.7 diesel 4x4 crew cab short bed) The CAT scale said 8200# with all the bells & whistles from the factory, full fuel, plus an aux fuel tank and tool box. Doesn't leave much room for a cargo. Door sticker says GVWR 10,000#