Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong

   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,751  
I wish I had pictures from 1986? 1987? Thereabouts when I voluteered to help a friend do a roof repair at his girlfriend’s family’s bungalow out on Long Island.

roof repair became roof replacement.

On the roof of my 1975 Chevy Impala: 18 sheets of plywood.
in the back seat: 20 rolls of asphalt roofing.
in the trunk: 10 more rolls of roofing and 5 buckets of tar, and several boxes of nails.

on the radio in a perfect world would have been War “Low Rider”…

Cars back then were tanks; even with all that weight it probably only squatted about an inch.....

Our neighbors back around 1975 had a four door Mercury sedan; don't know the model. I do remember that you could practically stand up and walk around the back seat area because there was so much room.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,752  
Can some of you guys explain this rig? Kind of a poor picture, I took it with my cell phone off a video. It was a video of a custom harvesting/transport crew on the move. Most of the trucks were semis towing two big trailers. First trailer was hauling the combine and the second trailer was towing the header.

With that type hitch there is no weight on the pickup plus he is double towing a fuel trailer. It looks sketchy to me, but maybe it is legit?

0701220350.jpg
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,753  
Can some of you guys explain this rig? Kind of a poor picture, I took it with my cell phone off a video. It was a video of a custom harvesting/transport crew on the move. Most of the trucks were semis towing two big trailers. First trailer was hauling the combine and the second trailer was towing the header.

With that type hitch there is no weight on the pickup plus he is double towing a fuel trailer. It looks sketchy to me, but maybe it is legit?

View attachment 752369
That is called a header trailer, very common, but not as common towing doubles like that.
I would think that he would put the 2 axle fuel trailer first as it will track better in a hard stop (especially if full), but if they all have brakes?


Aaron Z
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,754  
That is called a header trailer, very common, but not as common towing doubles like that.
I would think that he would put the 2 axle fuel trailer first as it will track better in a hard stop (especially if full), but if they all have brakes?


Aaron Z

The fact he is towing it with a pickup is what is bugging me. I can see it if it was a big truck. I would guess his load is about double what the pickup weighs. I tow heavy but always have part of the towed weight on the pickup. Some of those trailers are up to 20k gvw. I would think traction/control would be a problem with an empty pickup.

HD_Transport_1260x900.png
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,755  
I'm not familiar: Is this for combine/thresher head transportation?
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,756  
The fact he is towing it with a pickup is what is bugging me. I can see it if it was a big truck. I would guess his load is about double what the pickup weighs. I tow heavy but always have part of the towed weight on the pickup. Some of those trailers are up to 20k gvw. I would think traction/control would be a problem with an empty pickup.

View attachment 752399
20k is a lot of weight, any idea how far they are going?
It does look like there is something in the bed of the truck, so hopefully they have some extra weight to help keep it pointed in the right direction...

I'm not familiar: Is this for combine/thresher head transportation?
Yes, a larger head is way too wide to fit down the road on the front of the combine.

Aaron Z
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,757  
Can some of you guys explain this rig? Kind of a poor picture, I took it with my cell phone off a video. It was a video of a custom harvesting/transport crew on the move. Most of the trucks were semis towing two big trailers. First trailer was hauling the combine and the second trailer was towing the header.

With that type hitch there is no weight on the pickup plus he is double towing a fuel trailer. It looks sketchy to me, but maybe it is legit?

View attachment 752369

It’s probably pretty safe with the first trailer being so long assuming both trailers have brakes. But when you’re towing doubles the first trailer is required to be a 5th wheel.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,758  
Keep in mind that this farm machinery and therefore there is some leeway. Not saying that it shouldn't be hooked to a bigger truck though. I used to pull 30' trailers of cotton with a 1/2 ton pickup. Could get squirrely sometimes.
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,759  
Expert opinions with no knowledge , as per usual .
 
   / Share Pics of People Hauling or Towing Something Wrong #16,760  
Nick,

A lot of it depends on who is using it - private farmer or custom/for hire, and the state in which they operate. We retired to Missouri to my wife's family farm and I work part time for some farmers. They have two combines and a corn head and draper head for each. They farm a little over 5,000 acres, spread out over two counties. So, that entails a lot of moving of equipment. They have several header trailers, none of which have brakes. I believe the 16 row corn heads weigh right around 12,000#. I'm not sure what the drapers weigh. That means having both heads at a particular place, as they raise both soybeans and corn, (and sometimes wheat). When we move, it's usually two combines, four heads and trailers, a tractor and 1000 bushel grain cart (sometimes two), and four semis. Mostly, it's just a few of us moving a few machines at a time so it doesn't all look like a circus parade. If that is a custom outfit in your pic, I can't imagine they would have the fuel trailer full, but could be wrong.

To drive a farmers's tractor/trailer in Missouri, no CDL is required within a 150 mile radius of the home base and it's not for hire. I'm not sure what you are allowed in other states. Also, during harvest, we get a 10% overage on weight, so can be legal at 88,000#. Personally, I'd like to see drivers required to have CDL training...

Bud
 
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