verifiction
#32
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Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Kalamazoo, MI
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To find the wet weight of your car, simply take the GVWR from your door jam (that is the 4,XXX lbs. that you saw) and subtract the passenger and cargo capacity. That number should be 9XX lbs. or 1,XXX lbs. depending on whether you have a bench seat up front or buckets. This will give you your wet weight (with full oil, washer fluid, fuel, coolent, break, and power stearing fluids). The payload capacity is also shown on your door jam. For clerification, the GVWR is the Grose Vehicle Weight Rating and is essentially the maximum weight the vehicle will weigh if FULLY loaded to capacity--but not one pound over.
Hope this helps.
P.*. I drove truck for seven years--I am very familiar with GVWR.
Hope this helps.
P.*. I drove truck for seven years--I am very familiar with GVWR.
#33
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Originally Posted by willwren
I put my car on the scale last year. Me, no passengers, bunch of stuff in the trunk, about 50 pounds of junk in the back seat, and a full tank of gas. Came in at EXACTLY 4000 pounds. This was on the way to Lincoln City to meet Justin and his 92 SSEi.
I have a pic of the scale at 4000 exactly.
I have a pic of the scale at 4000 exactly.