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#2
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Can someone please explain how the maximum payload of a vehicle is decided. I am looking at purchasing a new xterra, which touts itself as being a tough heavy duty vehicle, capable of carrying five people, lots of gear, and a large roofrack. Yet the payload capacity is stated in various publication and on nissan as anywhere from 975 to 1098 lbs. Yet other vehicles such as the pathfinder is rated for 1317, the fjcruiser at 1711, the liberty at 1150 and even the small mini, minvan mazda 5, using low profile tires to boot is rated at 1183(more then the xterra) I plan on using the xterra, for four or five people plus gear, to go camping, skiing, etc. Five adult men alone, so averaging at 180 lbs only can easily put the xterra near the max. Can someone please explain? Much thanks. |
Truck chassis type vehicles are less comfortable, less
#3
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#4
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Thanks for the complete answer. The xterra is not a unibody, but definately a truck chassis, with a frame on chassis. It is the nissan frontier truck chassis, with the xterra body. I even see a report from motor trend asking the same question on "whats up with that", but they dont go into any details. I can post it, if you would like to see it. Much regards Yes, I would like to see the story from motor trend. The limitation, |
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Okay here it is. Please comment if desired. Much thanks Motor Trend Online senior producer John Matthius discovered something disconcerting about our Xterra. If you put four adults and cargo in it, you can possibly reach or exceed the 930-pound passenger-plus-cargo weight limit. He further noted pronounced suspension rebound and exaggerated bump stops over suburban intersection dips. He goes on to say that this much gear filled the cargo area to the roof, including the space between the rear passenger seats. Many buyers probably look at a midsize SUV like this and assume it would haul more weight than it actually does-as we did. I guess that would explain why I mistakenly figured the Xterra had a |
#7
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J.Lef wrote: Okay here it is. Please comment if desired. Much thanks Motor Trend Online senior producer John Matthius discovered something disconcerting about our Xterra. If you put four adults and cargo in it, you can possibly reach or exceed the 930-pound passenger-plus-cargo weight limit. He further noted pronounced suspension rebound and exaggerated bump stops over suburban intersection dips. He goes on to say that this much gear filled the cargo area to the roof, including the space between the rear passenger seats. Many buyers probably look at a midsize SUV like this and assume it would haul more weight than it actually does-as we did. I guess that would explain why I mistakenly figured the Xterra had a unibody. The limitation, then, must be the engine and/or tranny. CD |
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