highdesertranger said:
going with some fancy brake pads is only going to wear your rotors out faster. if you heat up your rotors with ceramic pads your rotors will be toast. for sure go with load range E tires. highdesertranger
True. More aggressive pads are pointless. You want bigger rotors and drums, primarily for more heat capacity. Higher-temp brake fluid (DOT 4 vs. DOT 3) and diligent brake fluid flushes will also help prevent fade.
In approximate order of failure likelihood from too much weight (assuming rear cargo only; there'll be some bearing down on the front axle but it's highly unlikely to be a factor for what you're doing):
- brakes may fade with a long hard stop. Like I said, more heat capacity is the remedy.
- tires may overheat and blow out if underinflated for the load, or if loaded or inflated beyond capacity, or if they're damaged or old.
- axle, depending on how overbuilt it is. While the axle housing itself is unlikely to bend or break, the wheel bearings can wear out from a combination of high speed and high weight, and the axleshafts may snap from a combination of high torque (acceleration) and high weight. The latter will mean either you can't move (if it's a full-floating type), or a wheel comes off and flies away with part of the axle still attached (if it's a semi-floating).
- the rest of the drivetrain (transmission internals, trans or engine mounts, driveshaft u-joints, rear differential) might fail from a combination of torque and weight. Accelerate gently and the likelihood of problems goes down.
- lugging too much weight uphill increases the load on the engine, and the likelihood of overheating. Again - drive gently and it won't be an issue.
- springs are unlikely to outright fail (if they do, it's very bad news because they also hold the axle in place), but you don't want them inverted or on the bump stops
- shocks are unlikely to outright fail (if they do, it's not a major safety issue, you'll just bounce a lot), but may wear out prematurely
- while it takes a whole awful lot of weight to bend or snap a frame, hitting a big bump real hard while overloaded just might do it (I read about it happening to an overloaded Toyota camper, being driven off-road way too rough).