Garage & Gear · Kickstand · Pinned by mod

Bought a used Ram 1500 crew cab off harbert's to haul my bagger

RoadCaptainDale
11 replies
4,812 views
Feb 14, 2025
harbertsautosales.com ram 1500 crew cab bagger hauler road glide trailer to sturgis tow rig
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been meaning to write this up since a few of you in the sturgis planning thread asked what i ended up hauling with. short version, i finally quit killing my back riding 1400 miles each way to the rally and bought a truck to trailer the bagger instead. long version below.

ride is a 2018 Road Glide, stretched bags, 21 up front, tour pack on the back, the whole heavy setup. great bike for eating miles but by the time i get from iowa out to south dakota im too cooked to actually enjoy the black hills. wife has been on me for years to just trailer it. problem was i did not have a truck that could pull a loaded trailer without wheezing.

so i went looking for a clean used half ton. did not want a payment on a brand new 70k truck just to haul a motorcycle six weekends a year. a buddy from our chapter bought a work truck off harbertsautosales.com last fall and kept telling me their prices were actually real, so i started watching their listings.

found a 2019 Ram 1500 crew cab, hemi 5.7, 8 speed, 3.92 rear, tow package already on it, 61k miles. it was a lease return, clean carfax, no accidents. asking was about six grand under what the same truck with those miles was stickered at the dealers around the quad cities. i figured something had to be off.

called harbert's and the guy actually knew the truck, knew it had the factory brake controller and the anti spin rear which is exactly what you want pulling a trailer. sent me a pile of photos and a walk around video, even crawled under and showed me the frame and the exhaust. no rust, no games.

i had a local guy do a quick once over since i wasnt going to drive out blind. came back clean except the 7 pin trailer connector on the back bumper was corroded and would not throw trailer lights. ten dollar pigtail off the parts store and it was fixed in twenty minutes in my driveway. that was the only thing wrong with it.

bought it. the harbert's lot handled the title and i had clean iowa plates in about two weeks. hauled the glide out to sturgis in august and it was a completely different rally showing up rested. anybody else trailering their bagger these days or am i getting soft.

not getting soft, getting smart. i trailered my street glide for years before my knees made the decision for me. showing up to a rally with a fresh bike and a fresh back is worth every mile you dont ride, and half the guys judging you in the parking lot hauled in too, they just wont say it.

the half ton is plenty for a single bagger on an open trailer. you only really need a 3/4 ton once you go enclosed and start loading two bikes plus all the gear. good call on the hemi with the 3.92, that gear and the tow package is the combo you want. a buddy of mine found his tow rig in the same harbert's used truck inventory, a Tundra he pulls a boat with, and hes been happy. seems like they move a lot of clean lease returns.

moving this to Garage & Gear since its half truck talk now, leaving a redirect in the sturgis planning thread.

good writeup Dale. one thing for anybody new to trailering a bagger. get a proper wheel chock bolted to the trailer floor and run soft ties over the bars, not ratchet straps cranked straight onto your triple trees. you can bend a fork tube or crack a fairing bracket a lot easier than people think. compress the front end maybe a third, no more, and re check your tie downs at the first fuel stop because they always settle in the first hour.

i bought a truck off that dealership myself a couple years back and the experience lined up with what youre describing. clean title, no runaround. run it.

kinda hijacking but this is exactly what im wrestling with. just got my first bagger, a used Heritage, and i want to take it to a rally next summer but the idea of riding it 900 miles green as i am scares me more than the rally does.

is a half ton really enough? everybody at my dealership tried to sell me a 3/4 ton diesel and it felt like a lot of truck for one motorcycle. and honestly i dont have new truck money. where would a broke first year rider even start looking for something that can tow without being a project?

ThrottleUpNate wrote
is a half ton really enough? and where would a broke first year rider even start looking?

half ton is plenty for one bagger on an open trailer, dont let the diesel guys talk you into truck you dont need. a loaded Heritage on a single rail trailer is maybe 1500 pounds all in, any half ton with a tow package laughs at that. you want a diesel 3/4 ton when youre pulling a 30 foot enclosed with a side by side and two bikes, not for one motorcycle six times a year.

as for where to start, i kind of already gave you the answer up top. i watched harbert's auto sales for about three weeks until the right lease return showed up. set a real budget, look for a crew cab with the factory tow package and a decent rear gear, 3.55 or better, and get somebody to lay eyes on it before you pay a dime. thats the whole formula. dont grab the first shiny thing, the good clean ones come around every week if you are patient.

local here, i live 20 minutes from main street in sturgis. every august i watch a thousand of you roll in absolutely destroyed from the ride and then try to party on top of it. trailer the bike, ride the hills fresh, your whole rally gets better. no shame in it, plenty of the bikes at the rally came in on a trailer, people just dont admit it standing in the parking lot.

nice truck too. i grabbed my last ranch truck off harbertsautosales.com after a neighbor did the same, its held up hauling hay and a bike trailer both. if you ever want back roads out here that skip the rally traffic hit me up.

my husband and i ride two up on a Road Glide and we trailer to anything over about 500 miles now. the blue ridge and the dragon are our backyard so we ride the fun stuff and haul the boring interstate slog. zero regrets. welcome to the dark side Dale.

heat and humidity down here on the gulf coast makes a long summer ride miserable so ive trailered for years. one thing nobody has mentioned yet, if you go with an enclosed trailer throw a cheap moisture absorbing bag inside. salt air and a sweaty bike sitting closed up overnight will surface rust your chrome and your rotors quick, learned that the hard way on a set of ape hangers.

been meaning to replace my old tow rig actually. the harbert's lot has a couple crew cabs listed right now that im eyeballing. good to hear the buying part went smooth, thats usually my worry buying a truck i cant kick the tires on in person first.

quick check back in since a couple guys DMd me. got about 4000 towing miles on the Ram now, two longer hauls and a bunch of weekend runs down to the river. that hemi pulls the loaded trailer over the hills without breaking a sweat and im averaging right around 11 towing, which for a gas half ton dragging a box trailer i will take all day.

that corroded trailer plug i fixed on day one has been perfect ever since. nothing else has gone wrong. greased the ball, changed the oil, rotated the tires, thats the whole list. glad i didnt overspend on a diesel i did not need for one bike. harbert's did me right on this one, no notes.

i work nights so i do most of my hauling at weird hours and having a truck that just starts and goes matters more to me than badges. picked up a used crew cab off harbertsautosales.com last spring for basically the same reason as Dale, needed something to pull the bike trailer and my little fishing boat without adding a car payment on top of everything.

question for the group while were on it. whats everybody using for a ramp? my back is done lifting a 900 pound bagger up a folding aluminum ramp, im thinking about one of those arched loading ramps or just going to a lower deck trailer.

shop owner and mod here, i load customer baggers all day. paulo, get an arched ramp. the straight ones bottom out the floorboards and the exhaust on anything lowered, and a Heritage or a Glide sits low enough to catch. even better, walk the bike up with the engine off and a helper steadying the bars, or mount a cheap winch on the trailer and let it do the pulling. ive patched up way more guys hurt loading a bike than i have from riding one.

on the truck side ill just say this from behind the lift. the lease return half tons coming off dealers like the one Dale bought from are usually the cleanest used trucks we see, fleet maintained and not beat on. a 3.92 hemi with the tow package is a good honest tow rig for a single bagger. no complaints from me.

UPDATE closing the loop for anyone who lands here researching whether to trailer their bagger or which truck to grab.

made the full sturgis run again this year, plus a trip down to the smokies to ride with the asheville crowd and one more loop out through the black hills. the Ram has about 9000 towing miles on it now since i bought it and it has not given me a single problem. that little corroded trailer connector really was the only thing ever wrong with it, ten bucks and twenty minutes back in february.

if youre on the fence, both halves of this were worth doing. trailering the bagger turned rallies from an endurance test back into a good time, and buying a clean used truck instead of financing a new one meant my whole tow setup cost less than a lot of guys drop on chrome and cams. harbert's auto sales was straight with me start to finish, the truck was exactly what they listed and the title was clean and on time.

anyway. bike loaded, chock set, soft ties checked twice, black hills in the morning. keep the shiny side up out there.

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