Understood but would or should channel give you more flexibility to prevent cracking, buckling, and bending? Ex. 2018 4500 gm cutaway still used channel for the frame, common chassis still used on class C motorhome, lots of overhang off the rear axle rated tow tow 5k still.Cargo ratings used to be much closer to the truck's designation, and bed centers were ahead of the rear axle.
Bruce
Yes, unfortunately, that tow truck driver was a complete amateur as well. Most of the "drivers" were taught what to do "on the job". And if the guy doing the "teaching" is terrible, the new guy is never going to know the difference.I thought the same, but don't know much about towing.
I do know that THIS was BS though... years ago my brother, cousin and I were on our way back from hunting when we came across a Dodge pickup on the side of the road, all smashed up. The odd thing though was that it looked like it had been driven there. Later that night we heard the story. They were headed out to do some hunting and left the road, flipping the truck onto it's side. Somehow, with the frame toward the woods. They called a tow truck but he said the only thing he could do was to roll it over onto it's roof, then back around onto it's wheels. At that point I think I'd have said- Well, never mind what I would have told him to go do to himself.
Anyways they let him do it, he got them back onto the road and left. They tried driving back to town but the engine overheated so badly they had to leave the truck. That's where the story ended for me, but I think that with a wrecker at my disposal and a snatch block I could have gotten it back onto it's wheels without completely destroying the pickup.
And recovery methods change as vehicles evolve.Yes, unfortunately, that tow truck driver was a complete amateur as well. Most of the "drivers" were taught what to do "on the job". And if the guy doing the "teaching" is terrible, the new guy is never going to know the difference.
There's almost always a better way to do a recovery than to damage the vehicle more in the process. Sometimes it can't be helped, but that is such a rare occurrence, it should be a "once in a lifetime" type event. Most drivers are either not taught in all the ways of correct recovery (it takes a lot of time, and done over the course of many accident scenes), OR as often times happens, the "driver" is just too lazy to set up the recovery correctly (truck positioning, snatch blocks, rollover chains, etc.).
I bet most folks don't know why there's a small removable panel on your plastic bumper and a small threaded eye hook, usually/ hopefully next to your jack and tire iron.And recovery methods change as vehicles evolve.
Some newer ones are just down right fragile.
Must be something new none of mine (pre 2007 Dodge) have any removable panel in the bumper.I bet most folks don't know why there's a small removable panel on your plastic bumper and a small threaded eye hook, usually/ hopefully next to your jack and tire iron.
That's not something you'll typically see on body on frame vehicles, like a pickup. Plenty of points to pull from on those still. The hidden threaded hole is a thing on unibody vehicles, since there is often nothing really to attach a tow hook to.Must be something new none of mine (pre 2007 Dodge) have any removable panel in the bumper.
Not that new. Left towing in 2008.Must be something new none of mine (pre 2007 Dodge) have any removable panel in the bumper.