Truckers, lets see your rigs!

See I knew I wasn't crazy. I just needed someone with absolute knowledge to confirm haha
 
Factory 20k axles often have double steering boxes as well. IIRC the legal weight you can carry is whatever the lowest rated part is on the axle. If you have a 20k axle and put 11r22.5s on it, you're limited to the tires. Putting 425s on a 12k axle though doesn't make it a 20k axle.
Depends on the state, in Ohio the max legal limit is 20k on a single axle and all they care about is the width of tire. On my permits you can put 20k on a 12k steer axle as long as you don't exceed 800# per inch of tire.

IIRC part of that option came due to running the bigger offset wide based singles.
Correct, but most do it even with duals if they're going to haul heavy. Goes with this option.
photo-25.jpg
 
I bet they ride nice, should take less pressure to support the same load
 
any of you drivers ever use power landing gear systems..dry freight box trlrs with a drop frame. use them to lift them to dock heights. just wondering cuz I used to repair them. they go in between the rear tandem on the trlr.

btw..why don't they have a better way for landing gear than that f'n crank on the trlr..I hate them fkers..why aint they got air or electric mtrs on em
 
I just want it so when I wire up my dumps it'll actually pick itself up.
 
any of you drivers ever use power landing gear systems..dry freight box trlrs with a drop frame. use them to lift them to dock heights. just wondering cuz I used to repair them. they go in between the rear tandem on the trlr.

btw..why don't they have a better way for landing gear than that f'n crank on the trlr..I hate them fkers..why aint they got air or electric mtrs on em
I'd be curious to see one or a link to really understand what you are talking about. I've seen trailer with legs at the rear but they were flat/drop decks. Any sort of van trailer I've just seen the ramps at loading docks that accommodate for different Heights if needed.


There are powered landing gear options for goosenecks, with semi trailers you don't really have to crank the actual trailer much, if ever, unless you don't have an air dump(assuming you have air ride), or have trucks with different 5th wheel Heights, or have dumb drivers. The latter is usually the most common denominator which leads to the guys that just put it in high range reverse, lock the axles, and slam it under to avoid cranking. The same guys are usually the high hookers too.

If you have your own trucks and trailers with decent drivers, it's pretty rare you ever have to actually crank any sort of load. I can't remember the last time I had to put any of ours into low range.

Sent from my SM-N910R4 using Tapatalk
 
Not my favorite colors but damn that's a good look.

62CFEA6A-83C3-4B2F-A10A-B2EC6556B453_zps5cuuforn.jpg


I like trucks like this much more than trucks that look like the crashed into a chrome shop. This truck has got some chrome and stainless but not over the top. Just enough to look classy!


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Yea that's not my favorite scheme but it still looks killer.
Old>New any day.
 
any of you drivers ever use power landing gear systems..dry freight box trlrs with a drop frame. use them to lift them to dock heights. just wondering cuz I used to repair them. they go in between the rear tandem on the trlr.

btw..why don't they have a better way for landing gear than that f'n crank on the trlr..I hate them fkers..why aint they got air or electric mtrs on em

Our pulling trailer has those, never used them but do know they make a nice spark show when one cylinder leaks off going down the road.
 
mostly drop frame box trlrs with light loads..foodstuffs...we still have em here at frito lay.
 
Back
Top