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Open Roads Forum  >  Truck Campers

 > DRW vs SRW safety, tire blowout

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Grit dog

Black Diamond, WA

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Posted: 03/01/23 10:59am Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

jimh406 wrote:

Grit dog wrote:

the ONLY time a comparable dually is putting more rear braking force into the pavement is once a srw would lose traction, assuming the dually wont.


Of course, there is no SRW that is comparable to a DRW. You can try to cherry pick some spec to make them seem the same.

If you want to play the rotational mass game, go find the actual numbers. The front tires/wheels of typical F350 DRW that are small 17s are much lighter than the typical F350 SRW running stock 35s and 18s or 20s. I think it's likely that there is little difference in the entire rotational mass, but wouldn't be surprised if the 6 DRW stock tires don't weigh less than SRW.

You have to ignore every person who's driven both SRWs and DRWs with the same TC to believe DRW/SRWs are equivalent with the exception of two less wheels and tires. You can do that, but don't kid a kidder.


Well, taking a typical 20” OE srw alloy wheel and OE tire and drw OE outer alloys x 4 and steelies x 2.
Tires are about 10lbs less/ea x 2 = -20lbs + 2 more tires @ about 45lbs /ea so about 80lbs more rear tire.
Rims, inner drw steelies and 20” alloys are about the same plus add 2 more drw alloys at 30 lbs/ea, so about +60 lbs in rims.
All in, about 140lbs more rotating mass on the rear axle with a drw.
Front is about 20lbs lighter per wheel alloy to alloy. So -40lbs up front to the Dooley.

All in, not kidding, since I did look it up even before you suggested I do that while speculating, yourself, drw is about 100lbs more total rotating mass between both axles.
And over 100lbs more on the axle in question.
Thanks for playing….

And I never said they were equivalent. The lengths some of y’all go to to put words in people’s mouths is amazing.
He11, I’d have a dually for anything much heavier than our old AF 860 campers. Never disputed that. Just disputing the false claims. Like a dually has better brakes and stops faster …


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Grit dog

Black Diamond, WA

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Posted: 03/01/23 12:52pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Disregard the last post as someone will pickup on the approximate and slightly incorrect math.
The takeaway is 4 OE tires and wheels on the back of a dually, best case, is way heavier than a typical OE srw tire/wheel combo.
And the fronts are lighter but not near as much lighter as the rear is heavier.
Period.

mkirsch

Rochester, NY

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Posted: 03/02/23 10:20am Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

If you leave it people aren't going to disregard it.

Depends on what you consider "way heavier." I'd have to get out a scale but I'd estimate a wheel-n-tire from my DRW truck to weigh about 75lbs. 16" steelies for the record. That's 150lbs. Couple of spring leafs... let's get wild and say the additional suspension adds 200lbs. That's 350lbs, which is maybe 12-13% of what an empty SRW weighs. Is that "way heavier?" Not to me.


Putting 10-ply tires on half ton trucks since aught-four.

Grit dog

Black Diamond, WA

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Posted: 03/02/23 12:19pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

Nah, I looked up tire and wheel weights real quick. It’s close but depends on exact size/model etc. and someone on this forum is bound to nit pick the lack of absolute proof…lol.
Yes spring pack may be a bit heavier too. But it’s not the sprung weight that adds “much”. It’s the unsprung weight. Which the truck can handle just fine and minimal effect on braking distance either.
But when that weight becomes rotational, our little friend inertia shows up and poops all over some folks’s uninformed “theories”. (Or all those classes I paid a lot of money for to become an engineer were a farce….but I doubt it)
The 7lbs per lb is a rough rule of thumb but the point is, is rotational mass has a FAR greater effect than static mass.

mbloof

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Posted: 03/02/23 12:46pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

AH_AK wrote:

Photomike wrote:

If I bought a truck for a camper I would go with a DRW just to be safe.

Problem that I have is that a DRW would not go down many of the trails / roads that I like to drive on. That was the reason I got rid of my little class C. Was just to wide.


This thread has jumped all over, but the original question had to do with safety. Are DRW safer in terms of maintaining stability in a blowout situation? The answer…probably. The thing is that if the probability of a blowout is low (with quality tires) to begin with and then the DRW advantage in terms of avoiding a subsequent loss-of-control accident is relatively small, then do you care enough to upgrade your truck on these grounds? I was simply trying to get a better feel for how often accidents (loss-of-control) result from a blowout on a truck with a camper and to see if there were more SRW accidents than DRW accidents. Right now, not enough data to say. If fact, no firsthand data of an accident and only one secondhand account. The lack of data tells a story.

Maybe all the SRW folks that had accidents died in the resulting rollover, but it is starting to feel like the actual risk associated with a SRW blowout-induced accident is pretty darn low. In my case, probably low enough that I won’t consider the safety advantage in my decision to upgrade to DRW or stay with my built out SRW. There are other, non safety-related aspects that I will still consider though. Of course, to each their own.


With a bit of "googling" one might find the #1 reason that tires "blow out" is because of sidewall overheating. A bit more will indicate this is caused by ether or both under inflation and overloading.

So outside of manufactured defects and sidewall damage from running into something (#2 & #3) if you use proper PSI inflation AND pay attention to (and don't exceed) the weight rating on the side of the tire a "blowout" is rather unlikely to happen.

Would a DRW be "safer" if it actually DID happen? IMHO sure why not?

While it could be said that ANYTHING is possible personally I don't worry about stuff that is not very probable.



- Mark0.

Grit dog

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Posted: 03/02/23 01:04pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

^Absolutely. The primary/main/#1 advantage of a dually is more tire and wheel weight capacity. And consequently less tire deflection than same load on a srw. Not static, but dynamic deflection.
#2 is usually duallies have a heavier OE suspension.

Both contribute to stability in the context of Truck campers.
It’s mostly what folks “think” make a dually more stable that is false.

Same reason when I get a new milquetoast half ton company truck with P or XL factory tires and need to load it heavy, I increase the air pressure to basically whatever makes the tires “round” in a static configuration. If that’s 10-20 psi over the max “rated” pressure, so be it.
If the tire is gonna pop from overloading it will pop whether it’s round or squishy. But it won’t generally just “pop” from over inflation or load but it will heat up and blow out more readily at the “right” pressure for the tire and the “wrong” pressure for the load.

AH_AK

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Posted: 03/02/23 02:08pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

I am with you Mark. I don’t think the blowout probability on my SRW with commercial 19.5’s is high enough to worry about.

For brakes, I find my stock 1T brakes to be good as long as I don’t forget to downshift in the mountains and not ride the brakes. If I change my mind, I will buy a big brake kit.

Some of the handling characteristics are subjective. A truck that a more experienced driver would be fine in, a less experienced driver might be white knuckling. I drew out a free-body diagram for the rear axle and the rear track width and tire stiffness COULD affect rotational (body roll) stiffness, but with the addition of an anti-sway bar, you have three “springs” acting in parallel, so the question becomes, is the added stiffness of moving the tire “spring” point outboard negligible compared to the other springs. That depends on the stiffness of the other springs. I am not surprised that some people report an “outrigger effect” while others (especially those moving from heavily modded srw) do not. Depends on your specific rig/tire. Throw the dynamic aspect in there and now shocks are in play. At the end of the day, if you find you are white knuckling and thinking “oh sh*t” as the camper rocks laterally, probably time to “stiffen your springs” and or get better shocks to dampen the rocking more effectively. If cost isn’t a big factor, a 1T stock DRW seems to be a great plug-and-play option. I completely understand why so many people opt for this. If you aren’t comfortable modding your srw, then the stock drw is an even better choice.

Bedlam

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Posted: 03/02/23 02:52pm Link  |  Print  |  Notify Moderator

So after almost 11 months of posts, the information is beginning to repeat because people do not read the entire thread. Time to close this out.


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