Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader?

/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #1  

jymbee

Platinum Member
Joined
Sep 20, 2011
Messages
626
Location
Upstate, NY
Tractor
Massey 1652, 1949 Farmall H
Not owning a dump truck any longer I spend too much time shoveling out a pickup truck load of material such as mulch, topsoil, crusher run, etc.

Been looking at these manual truck bed unloaders where you install this thing, roll out the mat, fill the bed and unload via a cranking mechanism mounted on the tailgate. I intend to buy something buy reviews seem to be all over the place so I'd appreciate some input as to their effectiveness from folks who have actually used one.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #2  
Have the Haul Master one from Harbor Freight. Works pretty decent for smaller loads. Definitely not something you would load up the bed to the rails with unless it was just dry mulch or something else light. Also works best with a plastic bed liner. Rubber mats and spray-on liners have way too much friction, and paint just gets messed up.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #3  
Another vote for HF's unloader.

I just used it to carry/unload a 4x8 trailer load of fallen Redwood limbs and branches, maybe a 800 lb load. It worked fine, just like the videos on YouTube. I don't know how much more weight it would move with such rough objects, without tearing.

I made an adapter to mount it in place of the trailer's tailgate, which has drop-in pins. And welded a socket into the end opposite the crank, to turn it with my drill and a 3/8 adapter. (This didn't work until it was near empty).

Here's my thread describing this modification, with photos.

In summary - recommended.
 
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/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #4  
I recommend it. I bought mine when it first came out in the mid 90s when it was called the LoadHandler. I used it initially to move dirt that I excavated with my homemade mini excavator and my Toyota 4x4 PU. Definitely need the low-friction bedliner or pad.

I have moved dirt, sand, gravel, mulch, fertilizer, split firewood, lumber and scrap metal. The FW splits are the only material that did not work well, cuz the wheel well humps cause hangups. But that problem could be avoided with neat stacking.

My LH was stored unused for years after I made my redneck Samurai dumptruck, but I am back to using it. It works super-well to pick up 1200# of con-mix at a time at the materials yard. I use my gen 1 4x4 Taco. Unloads in 10 seconds with the crank. I have done about 10-12 loads in the past year, and plan another load soon. The drag sheet has no visible signs of wear.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #5  
Using the unloader after modifying it to mount on the trailer.

1551869764.jpg
1498749915.jpg
 
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/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #6  
I see why you went that way for a trailer mount. Lacking a tailgate, the crank handle has no clearance. I never tried a trailer mount. I found that I could load up one of my trailers, then use the tractor's loader to lift the front to have it dump.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #7  
One can also just put something "heavy" down, (like a sheet of strong canvas), or a sheet of plywood, chain it to an immovable object, and drive away.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
Have the Haul Master one from Harbor Freight. Works pretty decent for smaller loads. Definitely not something you would load up the bed to the rails with unless it was just dry mulch or something else light. Also works best with a plastic bed liner. Rubber mats and spray-on liners have way too much friction, and paint just gets messed up.
Things to consider. Perhaps something like an old piece of paneling under the mat to reduce friction?
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader?
  • Thread Starter
#9  
I recommend it. I bought mine when it first came out in the mid 90s when it was called the LoadHandler. I used it initially to move dirt that I excavated with my homemade mini excavator and my Toyota 4x4 PU. Definitely need the low-friction bedliner or pad.

I have moved dirt, sand, gravel, mulch, fertilizer, split firewood, lumber and scrap metal. The FW splits are the only material that did not work well, cuz the wheel well humps cause hangups. But that problem could be avoided with neat stacking.

My LH was stored unused for years after I made my redneck Samurai dumptruck, but I am back to using it. It works super-well to pick up 1200# of con-mix at a time at the materials yard. I use my gen 1 4x4 Taco. Unloads in 10 seconds with the crank. I have done about 10-12 loads in the past year, and plan another load soon. The drag sheet has no visible signs of wear.
Good info_Of course any material left behind in front of and behind the wheel humps would require a bit of hand work, but pretty minor. I lost count of all the loads of various materials I had to unload by hand-- shovel & fork.

Are the drag sheets replaceable if somehow torn or just worn out?

Thanks for the input.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader?
  • Thread Starter
#10  
One can also just put something "heavy" down, (like a sheet of strong canvas), or a sheet of plywood, chain it to an immovable object, and drive away.
Thought of something along those lines. Perhaps a "box" of some kind that I can pull off the bed with the tractor. But I can see there would be numerous advantages to something like these crank unloaders.

Such as being able easily unload into the tractor bucket to be spread out some distance away.

Moving material to the back of the truck where I can more easily (without having to climb in/out of the truck bed) unload into a wheelbarrow to transfer to tight spaces-- such as inside my fenced in garden.
 
/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #11  
Things to consider. Perhaps something like an old piece of paneling under the mat to reduce friction?
My trailer in post #5 above has a steel floor down the center then plywood for the left/right floor panels, I think to improve traction when loading a 4-wheeler. The manufacturer was Snow Bear so maybe the trailer was designed for a snowmobile.

At any rate it didn't feel like there was much friction between the plasticized fabric and that floor.

In that photo I had the trailer tilted as far as the 3-point could lift its front, and I had to gouge a rut in the ground for the crank handle to turn 360 degrees. I'm considering shortening the crank handle because it was fairly easy to turn the crank and I don't need so much leverage.
 
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/ Recommendations for Pickup Truck Unloader? #12  
Your profile mentions having forks for your tractor. Using IBC totes with a cut bladder makes handling mulch and similar much more efficient and waaaay less effort...

They fill with a loader bucket at the nursery and I use my tractor for unloading and moving at home. I just tilt them to dump, else tilt and scoup out by the shovel as I'm spreading it. You can use a strap to fasten the tote to the forks, but it's not required.

The photo shows them in my utility trailer, with about 3cy of mushroom soil for the garden, but they work in the PU bed also, just fill them to what weight your tractor will lift. I put a 4 x 8 OSB panel under them when using my truck.
20230421_121705.jpg
 

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