Hauling lengthy materials in bed
#16
With the ones I posted, you can remove them and store away although a bracket will be left in place but you can also get the stuff above the cab, lessening what you have hanging over the back. I have a headache rack ond one of these gizmo's. I love it and will always have this setup.
#17
#18
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There is no G. There is no G. Repeat after me, THERE IS NO G!
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From: Texas
#21
#24
In Missouri it's 5 feet.
It's best to know your State's requirement, or err on the side of caution.
I have hauled lots of long lumber with my truck. It has an 8 foot bed, but I've got an Aux. tank and a tool box in the front of the bed too. So those two together eat up 31 inches of space. If I put the tailgate down I have 7.5 feet of space. Last summer I hauled 16 footers with that truck with the Aux. tank, but I took out the toolbox! Hauling lumber that long is an art form. I can only do it if I am also buying some 8 or 10 footers, and 12 footers, in addition to the 16's. I load the 8's first, then put the 10's on top and then the 12's on top of the 10's. Then I put in the 16 footers, and I weighed down the front of that load with a long piece of railroad track. This particular load I had to haul about 12 miles down a State highway, then another 10 miles down country roads. It bounced a bit, and that's always dangerous, but I kept the speed down, especially going over bumps and had no problems. But I did breathe a sigh of relief once it was unloaded.
#26
There's no Ummm about it. In addition to 150 pounds of rr track, I had some concrete blocks on there too, but no tie-downs. With the aux tank in place I can't get to the tie-down points. The load was strapped together very tightly, and that helps. Usually I use a 16 foot trailer to haul long lumber, but on this jobsite I needed to cross a narrow private bridge which zig-zagged at the far end, and immediately climb a steep creek-gravel driveway at the end of the bridge. There was just no way my truck was going to keep up the speed needed to get up that creek-gravel driveway while dragging my trailer behind me after zig-zagging off the end of the bridge. Even with a normal load in my (2-WD) truck I have a hard time getting up that driveway without digging trenches and scattering creek gravel 20 feet behind me. The hillbillies who live there all have 4-WD vehicles... and that's not a pejorative... I'm a proud hillwilliam myself.
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