I can guarantee that that triton was overloaded- regardless of the weighbridge certificate, the fact he watched his load and the rest of his arguments
there is no way that that particular vehicle would have been under the rear axle load limit for the vehicle, even if under the GVM
as mentioned earlier a lot of weight is supposed to be distributed through the cabin area
that vehicle had twin tyre carriers, an aftermarket fuel tank behind the rear axle and the ball weight
that vehicle had also lengthened the tow hitch so that the trailer hitch could clear the rear tyre carriers.
basically everything that could have been done to make the pivot on the rear (as far rear) as possible was done
its worth noting in this discussion as the GVM is also not the whole picture
there is how the load is distributed.
What he said
GVM, GCM is only a part of the picture. Maximum axle weights are very often not taken into consideration.
I weighed a twin cab '79 series with a caravan a couple of years ago. The owner had done a great job. All the mod cons, ARB, TJM and what ever other brands as well. A beautiful aluminium canopy. Tinny and trailer or the top. Very well made.
And he had the GVM upgrade as well because he was worried it was going to be "heavy".
Had a caravan attached, which was also weighed. 220kg ball weight.
Vehicle weights - actual gross weight 4040kg (upgraded GVM 3780kg) 260kg over
actual front axle weight 1280kg (rated at 1480kg)
200kg UNDER actual rear axle weight 2740kg (rated at 2300kg)
440kg OVER.So even though the total weight was 260kg over the upgraded GVM, the
rear axle was 440kg over. Near enough to half a tonne. Or 1/4 of the total weigh OVER.
Bringing the total weight back to the rated GVM (ditching the caravan) would not fix all the axle weight issue. (In hindsight I should of reweighed the axles again with the caravan disconnected.
)
I can give you examples of the heavy vehicle industry where trailer manufacturers have spruiked of their trailers being able to carry X tonnes, which they can, except when hooked up to a truck the rear axle is always overloaded and the front axle is always underloaded.
Peter