WinterDeere
Super Member
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2011
- Messages
- 6,044
- Location
- Philadelphia
- Tractor
- John Deere 3033R, 855 MFWD, 757 ZTrak; IH Cub Cadet 123
If you were closer, I'd give you mine! As to collapsing, I would think stamped steel ramps are much more likely to experience a catastrophic failure with total collapse leading to death, versus foam ramps just partially crushing, if overloaded. But either one kept in good condition should never fail, unless overloaded.That's what mine are, wouldn't trade them for nuthin' . I've read a couple stories of those foam ones collapsing after a few years, granted they could have been the cheap ones.
My foam ramps have the max load (4600 lb.?) printed in large block lettering on the bottom of each ramp. I can't remember if my steel ones even have a max load label, I'll have to check next time I have them down off the wall.
If a foam ramp collapses, I'd want to know what load was on it, and how it was stored. They do come with warnings about storing in places like a hot attic, as the foam can degrade at high temperature. That might be their fatal flaw, and the one big advantage of having steel ramps, but I store mine in an air-conditioned shop.