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Wow.. wonder if it would pull my 24' enclosed without the frame splitting in half?

This from Family RVing Magazine:
The front axle is rated at 7,250 pounds; the rear at 13,500 pounds. A 10,000-pound-rated Class III trailer hitch and a 37,500-pound gross combination weight rating (GCWR) allow for excellent towing capacity.

And from rvusa.com:
With a GCWR of 35,000, it packs a whopping 15,500 lbs. of trailer towing capacity.
 
I see your cheese and raise you 60 Billion… lol

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The East Rutherford Operations Center(EROC) at 100 Orchard Street, East Rutherford, New Jersey, is the regional office for cash handling and banknote processing of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.[1] The facility, which was constructed by Torcon in the early 1990s, features a 400,000-square-foot (37,000 m2) three-story structure which sits on 13 acres.[2] The structure is designed to house fail-safe operations in a secure environment.[2]The facility also has a state-of-the art automated vault measuring one million cubic feet, used for storing United States currency.[2][3][4] The vault is based on an automated storage and retrieval system (AS/RS) and can hold at least USD 60 billion.[5] Internally, the cash is transferred by automated guided vehicles (AGV).
 
I see your cheese and raise you 60 Billion… lol

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The East Rutherford Operations Center(EROC) at 100 Orchard Street, East Rutherford, New Jersey, is the regional office for cash handling and banknote processing of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.[1] The facility, which was constructed by Torcon in the early 1990s, features a 400,000-square-foot (37,000 m2) three-story structure which sits on 13 acres.[2] The structure is designed to house fail-safe operations in a secure environment.[2]The facility also has a state-of-the art automated vault measuring one million cubic feet, used for storing United States currency.[2][3][4] The vault is based on an automated storage and retrieval system (AS/RS) and can hold at least USD 60 billion.[5] Internally, the cash is transferred by automated guided vehicles (AGV).
Before I went to work for Chrysler, I was a furniture maker. My boss sent me to the bank to install counter tops I had made. He went with me and was acting a little strange. When we got there we went to the parking garage and end up at a glass window with three guys in a booth. I still had no idea what was going on, he did and was getting a kick out of watching me. They checked us out and we went to a door, went inside and it was an elevator that went down to a basement in the parking lot, under the bank. When the door opened we were looking at a vault door, at least ten foot around and 3 foot thick, it was open. We walked in and it opened up to a room full of people, in rooms that looked like small classrooms, all windows. They were counting rooms! The place was full of my counter tops with people everywhere counting money and packaging it up to be sent all over. I was in rooms FULL of three by three bricks of money. My boss looked at me and said, if you find a penny on the floor, LEAVE it. There were rooms with people counting change, next to rooms with people running counting machines with more money than I had ever seen. I looked at him with my mouth hanging open and he looked at me and started laughing. Installing those top in there that day was the most nervous I'd ever been on any job. He did the same thing to me when he took me to shake hands with the president of the USA for a job well done. He loved to play games with people. He was a great guy and mentor and I still have a ton of respect for him to this day!
 
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