@Nezchan@DrTCombs Oh, they take care of the loading problem with lift gates.
Most of the workmen drive the 1.5 ton (load) trucks. I've seen a 4.5 trying to negotiate McD drive through. WTF.
No. Some do use them for work.
Most use them to compensate for being small elsewhere.
@Ralph058 Where are you getting the load of these trucks? Do you mean the payload (that is, the amount of weight the truck can carry)? That amount is not coded in the number in the model name of the truck. Depending on configuration, a 2021 F350 may have a payload as low as 2,890 pounds or as high as 7,850 pounds.
This is not an unusual year. It's normal for pickup payload to vary by configuration in multiple ways (different GVWR and different curb weight).
@Ralph058 Where are you getting the load of these trucks? Do you mean the payload (that is, the amount of weight the truck can carry)? That amount is not coded in the number in the model name of the truck. Depending on configuration, a 2021 F350 may have a payload as low as 2,890 pounds or as high as 7,850 pounds.
@equiraptor Originally, they carrying capacity for the Ford trucks was 1000 pounds for an F-100, 1500 pounds for an F-150, etc.
Similarly there were numbers for Chevy and Dodge.
@Ralph058 Originally, yeah. But that hasn't been the case for a few decades. You can't assume a pickup's payload by its model name (which you seem to have done in two prior comments).
BTW, an F150 is a half ton truck. There isn't really a "1.5 ton" or "4.5 ton" truck in the common nomenclature, at least in the US.
Pickups now CAN carry more than they could in the past. Does it justify the hood height? No.
@Ralph058 Originally, yeah. But that hasn't been the case for a few decades. You can't assume a pickup's payload by its model name (which you seem to have done in two prior comments).
BTW, an F150 is a half ton truck. There isn't really a "1.5 ton" or "4.5 ton" truck in the common nomenclature, at least in the US.
@equiraptor I stand corrected.
I have always wanted a fixed height to headlights on all vehicles. I think the impact on heavy trucks would be minimal (headlights in the bumper). The impact on personal trucks would be big because jacking them up (and making the high hood worse) would result in decerting the truck for road use...as it should.
BTW. Some idiot in WI has a jacked up F-350 with the outrigger (reversed?) wheels. Looks totally stupid, but I'm sure he doesn't agree.
@Ralph058 Where are you getting the load of these trucks? Do you mean the payload (that is, the amount of weight the truck can carry)? That amount is not coded in the number in the model name of the truck. Depending on configuration, a 2021 F350 may have a payload as low as 2,890 pounds or as high as 7,850 pounds.
See: https://media.ford.com/content/dam/fordmedia/North%20America/US/product/2021/super-duty/21-Super-Duty-Pickup-Tech-Specs.pdf
This is not an unusual year. It's normal for pickup payload to vary by configuration in multiple ways (different GVWR and different curb weight).
@Ralph058 Where are you getting the load of these trucks? Do you mean the payload (that is, the amount of weight the truck can carry)? That amount is not coded in the number in the model name of the truck. Depending on configuration, a 2021 F350 may have a payload as low as 2,890 pounds or as high as 7,850 pounds.