Thank you for saying that Charles, I have to deal with a van who can't put on 4000lbs but chooses to anyway and under cut my rate by 40%.
I don't know what kind of springs you have on that van, but whenever I haul 3150 pounds in my GMC 3500 Extended Van, it feels like i'm driving an 18 wheeler. I can feel the weight pushing and pulling me in the seat every time I hit a bump, and breaking power is reduced by 50 percent. I have to drive 60mph in congested areas in order to make sure that I have enough stopping distance. There have been times when i've had really close calls while the van was empty and if I would have had 3k in the back, things would not have turned out as well as they did.
Yes you can get "helper springs and sway bars" to help with the stability of the load and the handling of the van; but you can't get more breaking power. I'm not worried about the van handling smoothly around corners at that weight as much as I am worried about being able to stop if I get into a sticky situation. I have loaded a 1500 van with 2100 pounds before, and believe me, it was one heck of a ride. I'll never attempt that one again.
It is what it is! If you want to tear your equipment up like that on a load; be my guest. I'm done with all that jive. I'm gonna list my van at 2800 pounds with my next carrier and that's all there is to it. I'm not gonna budge or be pushed over my weight limits this time around! One other thing. If you ever do get into an accident and they find out you're overweight, you are gonna go be in some deep sheet. I'm not trying to bash you, Zed, i'm just trying to look at this from a safety standpoint is all.
Like I said before. 4000 lbs is a straight truck load. Period. The problem is now you can't get straight truck money for 4000 lb loads because of companies putting them on vans. I say maybe it's high time to scale vans. That would put a stop to that pretty fast.
Not sure about GM vans, but my Super Duty Ford has braking power to spare. My axles are rated well in excess of the registered GVWR. My wheel bearings seem none the worse for wear every time I've repacked them with fresh grease.
Opinion + overloaded equipment = accident waiting to happen.
Like I said before. 4000 lbs is a straight truck load. Period. The problem is now you can't get straight truck money for 4000 lb loads because of companies putting them on vans. I say maybe it's high time to scale vans. That would put a stop to that pretty fast.
Come on now, Charles. Is this the old cargo van drivin man or the new corporate guy wishing them kind of regulations on us lowly van drivers! lol. Like I said in many other posts, if you say it enough times, it is going to happen. Be careful for what you wish for because if vans lose that overnight competitive edge, it's gonna be all teams in straight trucks scarfing up freight!
all i can say on the subject is, why work harder for the same money. thats like runnin 3000 mi. @ .75 or the same money @.90 for 2500. if you let them take advantage of you they will. as far as regulating vans/sprinters, you wait, its coming. the ever safety loving citizens groups will see to it.
Hey Chef, I'm told by some DOT officers they will ignore the upfitters sticker and go with the manufacturers sticker and ticket you according to the OEM sticker.
Having the wheel removed may cause you to be looked at, especially with those roving officers in Illinois and Michigan.
The chances of you getting dinged may be one in twenty million but it is that one chance.
I totally understand greg and i worded it wrong, I wasn't asking should be able to haul that much weight as in "way shouldn't I' but more of why shouldn't I, the truck will handle it, it is built to handle it....
After i get the scale ticket, my thinkng is i will be listing it somewhere between 3-3500 lbs available for freight...