Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong

   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,721  
Mythbusters has done this one at least twice. The only way to improve on stock is with a tight tailgate net if I remember. Same airflow stuff as tailgate up & a bit lighter.

Or a tonneau cover so I've heard.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,723  
Actually better with it up.

With it up the flow is more laminer. With it down the air churns just behind the cab creating induced drag.

The gain is minimal, about 3% if I remember correctly from the wind tunnel test we did 20 plus years ago.

Chris

SAE Engineers have done quite a few studies as well. Here are just 2 (unfortunately you need to buy them to read the whole paper but you can read a summary here):

Pickup Truck Aerodynamics - Keep Your Tailgate Up
Further Analysis of Pickup Trucks Aerodynamics

Basically they determined you get better fuel mileage with the tailgate up.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,724  
Here's the idiot I saw today....70, yes 70 pallets on a half-ton. Any wonder why it's riding so low, the frame/bed seems bent and the tailgate is all mangled?




Surprised dot didn't get them. Here they would have been all over him he wouldn't know what to do.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,725  
Mythbusters has done this one at least twice. The only way to improve on stock is with a tight tailgate net if I remember. Same airflow stuff as tailgate up & a bit lighter.

The net actually made it worse. All other configurations were negligible gains.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,726  
The net actually made it worse. All other configurations were negligible gains.

Think about this:

It's all about the money.

The auto industry (mileage) is very regulated. It there was a fuel mileage advantage to keeping the gate open, they would have design something to accommodate that. Simply put, it'd be far cheaper to design a more fuel efficient tailgate to increase mileage than to re-engineer an engine with increase fuel mileage.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,727  
Surprised dot didn't get them. Here they would have been all over him he wouldn't know what to do.

Yeah, I'm sure you're right....I've spent a lot of time in VA, and I know what you mean.

The funny thing is I posted this picture to my Facebook page, and one of my friends who lives near where the picture was taken says he's seen the guy doing the exact same thing, in the exact same area, multiple times. There is a pallet factory about 25mi south of where the picture was taken, and I suspect he's picking them up there....eventually something is going to go sideways, and that may be the back half of the truck, along with a bunch of pallets. Hopefully they won't fall on an innocent bystander.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,728  
Ok, I will get all technical on you guys. The cab of a truck is working like the wing of a airplane.

The way a wing works is its basically flat on the bottom and curved on the top. Imagine a molecule of air hitting the leading edge and splitting in half then rejoining on the trailing edge. The half of the molecule on top of the wing has to travel farther so it must travel faster then the half going under the bottom. This creates a pocket of low pressure above the wing that literally "sucks" the wing up. This is how lift is created and how a airplane flies.

Same thing is happening with your trucks. Imagine the doghouse, cab, and bed as the wing. The low pressure being created on the top side is sucking things out of the bed.

Chris

You are correct, sir!

In fact, they proved that on one of my favorite shows "Mythbusters", when they looked at whether it was more economical to drive with your tailgate up, down, or absent. The tailgate up came in second to a tailgate net (on their second show about it, but inly becauee it still generated the rolling ball of air like having a tailgate does, while weighing less.

It seems that when you have an obstruction like a tailgate or net at the back of the bed, the air coming over the cab hits that and rolls back toward the cab creating a standing wave that reduces drag and saves gas, but if you have a tonneau cover or the tailgate open (or just off), the standing wave disappears and you lose fuel economy.

Tailgate nets have enough substance to act like a solid tailgate, but weigh less, so they are even more fuel efficient.

I have to admit though, I like the MB show better when they had Starr, Carrie and the other female staffers on board. Grant and Torrie were OK, but not as fun to watch.

Thomas
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,729  
You can see this if you have a little loose hay or woodchips in the bed of your truck and you drive down the road.
They will loop around in the back of the truck.

Aaron Z

Unless you have your rear slider open, then they come flying in at the back of your head- I learned that lesson PDQ!
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,730  
My Bro sent this to me , found it somewere on the net . And " NO " this is not ME or My Trailer , ( I have a Big Tex Dump :)

sand pile.jpg


Fred H.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,731  
My Bro sent this to me , found it somewere on the net . And " NO " this is not ME or My Trailer , ( I have a Big Tex Dump :)

<img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=413172"/>

Fred H.

:laughing:

In all honesty though, maybe he was trying to hold the walls together?
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,732  
Because there are these signs along the roads:

secure.jpg

Bruce
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,733  
Picture was on this site .tractor.jpg
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,734  
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,735  
Sorry Folks !!! Thought I had " Cleaned " the verbage off the picture before posting and did not realize it double posted . Deleted post with verbage on previous page .

Seriously Sprinklerman ?? That was posted Here ?? Hope Somebody Seen that and Was not Actaully Doing That . Wow , That just does not look right .:shocked:

Fred H.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,736  
Picture was on this site .View attachment 413189
Heck that was an easy tow.

I'm within the allowable weight rating for the trailer, tires, hitch, and for the Subaru.

It was 20 miles on back farm roads, open country with no one else around, 40 mph max in a few spots that had a half mile line of sight, but mostly slower. It was uneventful.

Planning was about the same as you would do for a special-permit oversize load, ie travel at an hour when nobody is on the road and didn't get near populated areas.

This earlier one below was hairier. It was several hundred lbs lighter so less stress on the trailer but the weather was over 110 and the only route was down I-5, the sort of modern interstate with little traffic but with areas posted 70mph. 45~occasionally 50 mph on that route for a hundred miles was definitely hair raising.

In both those transports, I never got anywhere near another car so no excitement from anything unexpected. The main consideration was to think far ahead and leave so much space in front of me that I could have come to a complete standstill if something weird occurred way down the road ahead.

But none of my three tractors has ever left the ranch after arriving. No need, and no interest in repeating those tows.

 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,738  
Heck that was an easy tow.

I'm within the allowable weight rating for the trailer, tires, hitch, and for the Subaru.

It was 20 miles on back farm roads, open country with no one else around, 40 mph max in a few spots that had a half mile line of sight, but mostly slower. It was uneventful.

Planning was about the same as you would do for a special-permit oversize load, ie travel at an hour when nobody is on the road and didn't get near populated areas.

This earlier one below was hairier. It was several hundred lbs lighter so less stress on the trailer but the weather was over 110 and the only route was down I-5, the sort of modern interstate with little traffic but with areas posted 70mph. 45~occasionally 50 mph on that route for a hundred miles was definitely hair raising.

In both those transports, I never got anywhere near another car so no excitement from anything unexpected. The main consideration was to think far ahead and leave so much space in front of me that I could have come to a complete standstill if something weird occurred way down the road ahead.

But none of my three tractors has ever left the ranch after arriving. No need, and no interest in repeating those tows.


In some respects, I'd sooner have somebody on the road with a small vehicle/marginal load and driving carefully, than somebody who thinks they have a bulletproof setup and is driving along with their feet up on the dash, while texting.

You got 'er done, and don't make a habit of repeating same. :thumbsup:

One thing we all need to watch with tow ratings - braked vs. unbraked loads. Many small vehicles aren't rated above 1,000# unbraked; some require trailer brakes, even for 1000#.

Had a conversation with a guy recently - he was driving his 30,000 rated flat deck truck empty, towing a good sized unbraked trailer, loaded. On a local hill, the trailer pushed him through an intersection, as the braked truck wheels didn't have enough vertical load. An accident was only avoided because it was a another truck driver who had the crossing green, saw what was going on, and didn't take his right of way.

Driving an HD setup does not make you immune to accidents.

Rgds, D.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,739  
Driving an HD setup does not make you immune to accidents.
Rgds, D.

It just means we lived through the idiotic things we did when we were young and now can afford bigger toys. Hopefully learned a few things along the way.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #1,740  
It just means we lived through the idiotic things we did when we were young and now can afford bigger toys. Hopefully learned a few things along the way.


True enough. Surely I have a guardian angel because a lot of these dumb things look familiar to stuff I have done in my youth.
 

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