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RV towing with a 1/2 ton (minor update)

Posted on 7/29/25 at 7:26 am
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
6916 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 7:26 am
Wife and I are looking at RVs and trying to decide if it's worth getting something that my truck can tow and using that until we are in a place to upgrade my truck.

I have a 2020 ram 1500, 5.7 hemi. 1800 payload and 12kish towing capacity. It is paid off hence not wanting to upgrade the truck just yet.

Most of the time we would be taking 2 vehicles. Me and my truck pulling the RV and my wife would take her suburban with the kids, so don't factor that into payload.

I am thinking if we keep the dry weight under 6k lbs on the RV I should be fine to tow it. We've been looking at 30-35 foot, under 6k dry weight assuming it would be packed with anywhere from 1-2k of stuff putting the total tow weight under 8k.

Is that doable? What is the most you would pull RV wise with a half ton?
This post was edited on 8/2/25 at 11:20 pm
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
70776 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:06 am to
As long as your truck meets all the rating requirements (make sure you are checking the door jam label on your truck) then yes, should be fine.

8k @ 35 feet is a lot, but it should be safe and doable with a weight distributing hitch. You'll certainly know it's back there, and you'll want a good brake controller.

1,800 payload is a lot for a half ton truck. Is that off your door jam sticker?
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
6916 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:08 am to
I checked the door jam awhile back, I was attempting to remember off the top of my head. It was either 1,600 or 1,800, I'll go check it in a minute. My wife's suburban is actually higher
Posted by southern686
Narnia
Member since Nov 2015
1019 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:10 am to
quote:

Is that doable?

Yes. As long as your truck it rated for said camper, you have a proper weight distribution hitch, and trailer brakes. (you're truck being newer probably has an integrated trailer brake controller)

quote:

What is the most you would pull RV wise with a half ton?

For a bumper pull behind a half ton, the most I'd want is 26'. 30' would be pushing it for me, personally.
If I were going 36' and planned to camp often or far away, I'd want a 3/4 ton and fifth wheel. Just more comfortable and stable to tow.


But then again you see it all the time, people dragging 36'+ bumper pulls behind half tons without any weight distribution hitches and truck squatted to the ground.
Posted by Novastar
Member since Jan 2023
639 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:15 am to
What's your axle ratio? The 3.21 wouldn't be ideal, the 3.92 Max Tow package would be much better. Pulling is one thing, stopping however is another.

Hopefully you have the Max Two package which includes the engine and transmission cooler, trailer sway control and the trailer brake controller.
Posted by mcpotiger
Missouri
Member since Mar 2005
8812 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:17 am to
You can pull it. pulling it comfortably may be a push. How many people are you sleeping? Can you get by with a shorter one that weighs less? If I'm going 30+ I am likely looking at a 5th wheel and a 3/4 or 1 ton, I pull a 26 foot with a dry weight of 5K with my 2017 Toyota Tundra with no issues.
Posted by 24nights
North of I10
Member since Apr 2012
5229 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:20 am to
Stay around 6kish, does the truck have a brake control?
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
6916 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:28 am to
Family of 5, wife and 3 kids.

Looking at bunkhouse models. Requirement being the big bed has to be a "bedroom" so there's a door to close for some level of privacy. Everything else is up for debate.

Checked my door, 1505 payload. Truck does have a brake controller.

3.92 gear ratio
This post was edited on 7/29/25 at 8:42 am
Posted by rattlebucket
SELA
Member since Feb 2009
12510 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:35 am to
I towed a 36’ 8000lb dry weight bumper pull with a ford excursion 6.8L v10. Handled it ok but i know was at then 10,000 max mark. All that to say good for you staying way below the towing capacity. You will have peace of mind when driving and stopping! Especially if you plan to tow it in any elevation. Sounds like you got it figured out. Bump with a pic when you get one!
Posted by tigerdup07
Member since Dec 2007
22228 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:46 am to
yes. it's plenty doable. i did it for years pulling my 35' that weighed 8500
Posted by GREENHEAD22
Member since Nov 2009
20473 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:46 am to
What is the suburban rated for? Does it have the max tow package? I used to tow all kinds of shite with my burbank.
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
6916 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:53 am to
I think the burban has 1540, not a lot more. It's a standard z71 5.3 suburban.

So am I fair I'm assuming stay close to 30 and under, and 6k dry weight and under and I'm probably good?

Of course adding a weight distribution hitch.
Posted by KemoSabe65
70605
Member since Mar 2018
6188 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 8:57 am to
Just wait till you’re getting passed by multiple 18wheelers or a 20 mph cross wind. Wind resistance and braking will be your Achilles heel with a half ton.
Posted by BoogaBear
Member since Jul 2013
6916 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:04 am to
quote:

Just wait till you’re getting passed by multiple 18wheelers or a 20 mph cross wind. Wind resistance and braking will be your Achilles heel with a half ton.


Trust me I want a 3/4 ton. I just don't want to spend the money on a 3/4 ton.
Posted by AlxTgr
Kyre Banorg
Member since Oct 2003
86171 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:05 am to
I have done it with two different 1/2 tons and two different fifth wheels. I had zero issues, but we were in state travelers only. Braking is overplayed in these discussions. Once you get your controller set right, you'll stop faster than you did without the trailer.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
70776 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:07 am to
quote:

My wife's suburban is actually highe


My wifes subaru has the same payload capacity as my 3/4 ton diesel does.
Posted by tadman
Member since Jun 2020
5140 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:08 am to
Here's the thing about tow ratings and 1500's.

You can do anything you want once.

Put differently, if you are going shorter distance, flatter land, less frequent trips, you should be in better shape than if you're weekly going over the smokies or something.

This setup wouldn't bother me for example going once a quarter from Baton Rouge to a camp couple hours away, maybe 4-6 hours, using mostly interestates (no stopping).

But from Knoxville to Asheville? Monthly? That might be a pass, lots of brakes usage and such.

I'm trying to illustrate that we're looking at a spectrum, not a yes/no decision. The more you do this, the more hills, the more brakes, the worse the wear gets on your truck. But it is a truck, so you don't have to treat it like a fine Italian sports car. You can tow, just use your head.

I used to manage a fleet of 20 trucks for a heavy equipment repair company. Those dudes would haul tandem trailers and beat the living daylights out of them. I hated that part of the job.
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
70776 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:15 am to
quote:

Trust me I want a 3/4 ton


Depending on how it's configured, you could actually end up worse off than you are with the truck you've already got.

All these dudes dragging around triple axle toy haulers with 3/4 ton diesels are way extremely overweight. It's not like the old days where a 3/4 ton and a 1 ton were the same trucks with different spring rates, particularly with Dodge. With dodge, the whole truck is different (frame, suspension, axles), with chevy and ford, the suspension and rear ends are different.

A 3/4 ton diesel might well be worse than a 1/2 ton gasser depending on the configuration of the two. You can get a 3/4 ton with a payload rating of only 1,100 pounds if you do everything wrong. 4 fat dudes and an ice chest and you're officially overweight.

IMO, 3/4 ton diesels shouldn't even exist. They are nearly useless if you care at all about being legal. I have one and I hate myself for buying it. Should have gotten a gas burner.
Posted by Mstate
Birmingham
Member since Nov 2009
10376 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:33 am to
quote:

IMO, 3/4 ton diesels shouldn't even exist. They are nearly useless if you care at all about being legal. I have one and I hate myself for buying it. Should have gotten a gas burner.


I kind of agree here. If you are towing a lot but don’t want/need a dually why not just buy the 1 ton single rear wheel?
Posted by DownshiftAndFloorIt
Here
Member since Jan 2011
70776 posts
Posted on 7/29/25 at 9:44 am to
It's better now that many 3/4 tons are more like 7/8 tons. Most of them can be had rated over 10k GVWR which is what the age old problem with them was. My truck weighs something like 8,500 pounds empty, so only 1,500 pounds payload. The only real practical reason for them is you can have one as a commercial vehicle and as long as you stay under 10,001 lbs GVWR and 16,001 lbs gross total you don't need a CDL and DOT numbers.

In reality most of the commercial customers are buying 3/4 ton gas burners to save money, skirt DOT, and still have good payload capacity. Private owners are buying 3/4 ton diesels because they don't know any better and think it's a Peterbilt 379, or really aren't going to pull anything so they want the best ride they can get out of a big arse truck.

1 ton single wheel trucks are not common at all in any market segment but they are slowly gaining popularity as people become more educated about towing stuff.
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