Your towing rigs and trailers

   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,611  
The fact that you load big logs up high in your bed kind of surprises me, as that is a really clean looking truck, not an old beater firewood hauler. It's pretty easy to bump a side rail or to have a log roll or even hit the rear window. I'm not that brave, all loads of that sort go in or on the trailer only. If I need to haul more, I use a bigger trailer. You must be a careful guy as your truck looks really clean.

Agreed, I’ve never seen someone put a load like that on a nice pickup. You might get by with it once but you’ll total a bed probably quick doing that.
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,612  
I remember the days, recently, that only a semi could haul a load like that.

Impressive.

Crazy, aint it? I never thought we would have trucks just a little bigger than a dually pickup able to tow and stop 17 tons rather easily.
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,613  
Agreed, I’ve never seen someone put a load like that on a nice pickup. You might get by with it once but you’ll total a bed probably quick doing that.
I have done stuff like that since it was new. The bed is straight and nice like the rest of the truck. You can load things carefully and not damage it. And you can secure it properly so it stays where it is. It's a truck and I use it for one. Now my new one has a 5 1/2' bed. So it won't be hauling much. At least as long as the old one is around.
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,614  
I have done stuff like that since it was new. The bed is straight and nice like the rest of the truck. You can load things carefully and not damage it. And you can secure it properly so it stays where it is. It's a truck and I use it for one. Now my new one has a 5 1/2' bed. So it won't be hauling much. At least as long as the old one is around.

Why wouldn’t you get a bed designed to actually do that? IMG_8770.JPGIMG_8532.JPG
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,615  
I have done stuff like that since it was new. The bed is straight and nice like the rest of the truck. You can load things carefully and not damage it. And you can secure it properly so it stays where it is. It's a truck and I use it for one. Now my new one has a 5 1/2' bed. So it won't be hauling much. At least as long as the old one is around.
Funny to see someone catching crap for using a truck as a truck. Usually it's making fun of someone for their truck "never seeing dirt" or whatever.

That said, I'd have not put that much in mine, either. Haha. Though it rides better with a thousand pounds in the back...
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,616  
I have done stuff like that since it was new. The bed is straight and nice like the rest of the truck. You can load things carefully and not damage it. And you can secure it properly so it stays where it is. It's a truck and I use it for one. Now my new one has a 5 1/2' bed. So it won't be hauling much. At least as long as the old one is around.

That takes caution and skill, good for you. I suspect I'd fumble a log and have a problem. Know that I am not being critical of your work, just impressed actually.
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,619  
Why wouldn稚 you get a bed designed to actually do that? View attachment 670591View attachment 670592

In California, if you are driving a "pickup" as defined by the vehicle code, you do not have to go through scales, you don't need a weight sticker, you don't need DOT numbers, you don't need to be inspected and so forth. Otherwise it often makes sense to have a small dump truck or a flatbed, but it pushes you into an entire realm of regulations and costs, even if under the CDL requirements. Not an issue in TN I suspect. On the other hand, a dump trailer in California is super cheap to register, requires no inspections and so forth. Probably a lot of California guys that would be better off with a 5 yard dump are instead pulling trailers.

A "pickup" in California must have a GVWR of under 11,500 lbs and must also have a stock factory pickup bed. Most newer 1-ton single rear wheel trucks are over that, and all newer 1-ton duallys are over that. Ford allows you to pick your GVWR on their srw F350 between several choices, the obvious one for CA is 11,400. As far as I know, Chevy and Ram srw 1-tons are both over 11,500. Creates a real headache.

Your state will differ.
 
   / Your towing rigs and trailers #3,620  
Well, I mean... your bed looks pretty torn up to me; tailgate is all bent up. His isn't. LOL

My tailgate is slightly bent for from dumping 2 ton stumps across it. Aside from that my beds are pretty good shape. I’ve hauled thousands of loads as bad or worse as the picture. A pickup bed would be destroyed in in 1 load. And my trucks have been getting beat on for 30 years.
 

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