Heavy Towing...your honest opinion
#1
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Heavy Towing...your honest opinion
I have a part time business of hauling junk cars, trucks, equip, etc to the steel shredder for extra money, and while working on a farm, was offered to haul a large truck...actually very large.
Its a late 80's Ford L9000 (old coal bucket) No drivetrain, no bed. Just cab, 4 axles and a frame. I am not worried about weight because i have a heavy 14,000 lb trailer, a Class 5 Hitch, reciever, and ball and a heavy rear suspension on the truck, with excellent trailer brakes, etc.
My worry is size. My trailer is not a 5er, so the truck will look very large on the trailer. Is that gonna lead to my chances of being pulled over, and hassled? I dont think im illegal, but i hate the "fine print" Ill be pulling about 20 miles of state routes
Its a late 80's Ford L9000 (old coal bucket) No drivetrain, no bed. Just cab, 4 axles and a frame. I am not worried about weight because i have a heavy 14,000 lb trailer, a Class 5 Hitch, reciever, and ball and a heavy rear suspension on the truck, with excellent trailer brakes, etc.
My worry is size. My trailer is not a 5er, so the truck will look very large on the trailer. Is that gonna lead to my chances of being pulled over, and hassled? I dont think im illegal, but i hate the "fine print" Ill be pulling about 20 miles of state routes
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Originally Posted by csramsey640
I have a part time business of hauling junk cars, trucks, equip, etc to the steel shredder for extra money, and while working on a farm, was offered to haul a large truck...actually very large.
Its a late 80's Ford L9000 (old coal bucket) No drivetrain, no bed. Just cab, 4 axles and a frame. I am not worried about weight because i have a heavy 14,000 lb trailer, a Class 5 Hitch, reciever, and ball and a heavy rear suspension on the truck, with excellent trailer brakes, etc.
My worry is size. My trailer is not a 5er, so the truck will look very large on the trailer. Is that gonna lead to my chances of being pulled over, and hassled? I dont think im illegal, but i hate the "fine print" Ill be pulling about 20 miles of state routes
Its a late 80's Ford L9000 (old coal bucket) No drivetrain, no bed. Just cab, 4 axles and a frame. I am not worried about weight because i have a heavy 14,000 lb trailer, a Class 5 Hitch, reciever, and ball and a heavy rear suspension on the truck, with excellent trailer brakes, etc.
My worry is size. My trailer is not a 5er, so the truck will look very large on the trailer. Is that gonna lead to my chances of being pulled over, and hassled? I dont think im illegal, but i hate the "fine print" Ill be pulling about 20 miles of state routes
If your legal for the weight and width, less than 8" wide, you are OK. If you are not legal and hauling a big overweight looking rig you may get stopped.
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Originally Posted by RickCJ
If your legal for the weight and width, less than 8" wide, you are OK. If you are not legal and hauling a big overweight looking rig you may get stopped.
Ramsey, do you know what the truck weighs?
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#8
Not a 5er?
I am guessing when you say that your trailer is not a 5er, meaning not a fifth wheel with a king pin or a gooseneck either? (still learning the lingo around here) I'm thinking you don't want to pull it on a bumper trailer. You'd have to have a pintle because I don't think you could get the tounge weight less than 500 lbs for a reciever hitch. It would ride like a load of rocks. In OK, the state width max is 8'6" and height is 13'6" and the weight is the GCVW of course.
I have a #14,000 gooseneck trailer (see gallery) and haul a JD 4020 with loader. All in all over #10,000 net cargo. Your L9000 is going to weight somewhere in the neighbor hood. My 3500 weighs in at #8000 alone. I'm also assuming your trailer has two #7000 axles and is not a dual tandem rig. You may bend your rims if you have a lot of manueving to do.
Be carefull what ever you do. Just remember they are easy to get going, but hard to shut down. Drive slow!
PS. Just noticed your exhaust brake, that is a good thing to have in this situation!
I have a #14,000 gooseneck trailer (see gallery) and haul a JD 4020 with loader. All in all over #10,000 net cargo. Your L9000 is going to weight somewhere in the neighbor hood. My 3500 weighs in at #8000 alone. I'm also assuming your trailer has two #7000 axles and is not a dual tandem rig. You may bend your rims if you have a lot of manueving to do.
Be carefull what ever you do. Just remember they are easy to get going, but hard to shut down. Drive slow!
PS. Just noticed your exhaust brake, that is a good thing to have in this situation!
#9
[IMG]
I found a used '93 model L9000 with a dump bed and snow plow and it weighs in at #34,500. I can't figure how much to subtract for the stuff you don't have, but it looks like it adds up fast!
Apparently the image didn't work. How do you post an image on this thing?
I found a used '93 model L9000 with a dump bed and snow plow and it weighs in at #34,500. I can't figure how much to subtract for the stuff you don't have, but it looks like it adds up fast!
Apparently the image didn't work. How do you post an image on this thing?
#10
Chapter President
Originally Posted by 4x4dually
I am guessing when you say that your trailer is not a 5er, meaning not a fifth wheel with a king pin or a gooseneck either? (still learning the lingo around here) I'm thinking you don't want to pull it on a bumper trailer. You'd have to have a pintle because I don't think you could get the tounge weight less than 500 lbs for a reciever hitch. It would ride like a load of rocks. In OK, the state width max is 8'6" and height is 13'6" and the weight is the GCVW of course.
I have a #14,000 gooseneck trailer (see gallery) and haul a JD 4020 with loader. All in all over #10,000 net cargo. Your L9000 is going to weight somewhere in the neighbor hood. My 3500 weighs in at #8000 alone. I'm also assuming your trailer has two #7000 axles and is not a dual tandem rig. You may bend your rims if you have a lot of manueving to do.
Be carefull what ever you do. Just remember they are easy to get going, but hard to shut down. Drive slow!
PS. Just noticed your exhaust brake, that is a good thing to have in this situation!
I have a #14,000 gooseneck trailer (see gallery) and haul a JD 4020 with loader. All in all over #10,000 net cargo. Your L9000 is going to weight somewhere in the neighbor hood. My 3500 weighs in at #8000 alone. I'm also assuming your trailer has two #7000 axles and is not a dual tandem rig. You may bend your rims if you have a lot of manueving to do.
Be carefull what ever you do. Just remember they are easy to get going, but hard to shut down. Drive slow!
PS. Just noticed your exhaust brake, that is a good thing to have in this situation!
#11
Chapter President
Originally Posted by 4x4dually
[IMG]
I found a used '93 model L9000 with a dump bed and snow plow and it weighs in at #34,500. I can't figure how much to subtract for the stuff you don't have, but it looks like it adds up fast!
Apparently the image didn't work. How do you post an image on this thing?
I found a used '93 model L9000 with a dump bed and snow plow and it weighs in at #34,500. I can't figure how much to subtract for the stuff you don't have, but it looks like it adds up fast!
Apparently the image didn't work. How do you post an image on this thing?
#12
Originally Posted by csramsey640
Ill be pulling about 20 miles of state routes
Did you guys miss this?
If it were me and I were under GCVWR I would just run it. Now if it is more like 200 miles I would be contacting the DOT and getting all my ducks in a row. The fines aren't too bad, but the headaches that go along with them are what will really ruin your day.
#13
Dog
Look at the first line in the original post...... see the word "business"
I have been in this business for 30 years. Get one of them little tickets
in PA and see just how hard they pull your pucker string. In PA a Ford
F-350 with a 8 foot dump can not legal but a shade over 4000 pounds
in the bed.
It's better to get permission then to seek forgiveness is PA.
Look at the first line in the original post...... see the word "business"
I have been in this business for 30 years. Get one of them little tickets
in PA and see just how hard they pull your pucker string. In PA a Ford
F-350 with a 8 foot dump can not legal but a shade over 4000 pounds
in the bed.
It's better to get permission then to seek forgiveness is PA.
#14
Originally Posted by csramsey640
I dont honestly have a clue on weight, but im willing to bet about 4-5 ton.
Take the mirrors off, or fold them in, you should be fine width-wise, depending on how wide the trailer is. Truck shouldn't be much over 96" wide. The flatbed on my Ram is 94" wide.
The DOT guys in any state or certain locales, can be a real PITA.
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Ill answer a few questions.
Yes I do have a class 5 hitch, with a 15,000 lb pintle setup. weight wise(will truck/trailer handle it) Yes it will handle it, but I think what im looking at is how odd it looks. I dont need any extra heat from the Law because it looks oversized compared to my pickup and trailer combo.
I think we are gonna give her a shot.
Yes I do have a class 5 hitch, with a 15,000 lb pintle setup. weight wise(will truck/trailer handle it) Yes it will handle it, but I think what im looking at is how odd it looks. I dont need any extra heat from the Law because it looks oversized compared to my pickup and trailer combo.
I think we are gonna give her a shot.