Too many Kubotas
Veteran Member
Meh. Those little 1/2-tons are great for towing...and get good mileage.
I have 2 rear view cameras from Rexing. Very very pleased with them. $175 ish.I have never considered an add-on camera, my truck is 10 years old and they were only coming in the high-end trucks back then.
I suppose you can find them on Amazon?
I thought it was a pine. Either way, it was too big for that truck.Looks like ash
Pretty sure that is a racist concept in this day and age!always amazing when people have zero concept of weight capacity. Probably an easy 2000-3000 lbs above the rear axle payload rating.
Dry topsoil is around 1 ton per yard, up to a ton and half per yard when wet. I'd guess there's 4 yards in that trailer, assuming it levels off at 12' x 6' x 1.5', so at least 8000 lb. payload, on what appears to be a 10k trailer... as you don't see many 7k lb. dump trailers.Caught this one while out at lunch today. That trailer is riding a little low in the front.
View attachment 1019141
I was thinking a lot about rear axle capacity last week, when I had to pick up 1200 lb. of seed and fertilizer. I really didn't want to hook up my tandem axle tractor, as it has solid sides and fork-lifting things in and out of it is a huge pita (has to be done with slings). My truck has a payload rating around 1480 lb., but I weigh 170 lb. and I had a nearly-full tank of gas (35 gallons). Some quick math shows I was probably right at max payload without me in the truck, but that 170 lb. discrepancy is only 2% of GVWR.
I normally never overload a vehicle, but in this case I placed the material as far forward in the bed as the crew cab configuration allows, and drove slow the five or ten miles to home. I figured at just 102% of GVWR, I'm probably within the error of measurement of any scale that'd be used to weigh the vehicle, and way within whatever safety margins were used in engineering it.