I'm not sure if you have enough truck/trailer for that machine.
As they should be in some casesTrailer police should be here soon!
Anyways, looks good!
Borrowed a friend's trailer...a little overkill, but did the job.I'm not sure if you have enough truck/trailer for that machine.
Just kidding. Congrats
So the Ford is towing the Chevy?Here’s mine. Oh wait. That’s my truck on a trailer. Blown trans at 88k :-( Brother let me borrow his rig to tow it over a hundred miles home.
Yup! I don’t have truck brand loyalty personally, but I figured some folks may have an opinion about it haha.So the Ford is towing the Chevy?
Ha! That generation of Chevy’s seem to have very baddddd issues with the transYup! I don’t have truck brand loyalty personally, but I figured some folks may have an opinion about it haha.
The 2018 Chevy 1500 is my first truck. I really like it, except for the blown trans at 88k. I don’t even tow or plow with it. Maybe I’ll get a Ford next time. Or a Toyota. Those all seem pretty nice to me.
How well does the Tacoma tow that setup? I have the same truck and a B2601 with loader and BH, have not tried towing yet.
At it’s heaviest (tractor, weighted tires, FEL w/ bucket, concrete filled ballast box, trailer) it’s about 5,800 lbs. The Taco (2013 with the 4L V6 and tow package) does decent for how I tow with it: relatively short trips, not on the interstate, a few steep but no long grades, leave plenty of room in traffic, etc. If I towed frequently I could make the case for something more but it suits my needs fine.How well does the Tacoma tow that setup? I have the same truck and a B2601 with loader and BH, have not tried towing yet.
I might have noticed that immediately. I do see some orange iron between the two in the background.Yup! I don’t have truck brand loyalty personally, but I figured some folks may have an opinion about it haha.
The 2018 Chevy 1500 is my first truck. I really like it, except for the blown trans at 88k. I don’t even tow or plow with it. Maybe I’ll get a Ford next time. Or a Toyota. Those all seem pretty nice to me.
That's a neat trailer. I bought my first tilt a few months ago but the deck is hydraulic. I still haven't decided if that's a benefit or a detriment. The only tilt trailers I've used in the past had simple gravity decks with a locking pin.
Thanks it's working well for my needs. It does have a large single hydraulic shock absorber (simple, no controls) that dampens the motion so you don't have to worry about *slamming over*. Just creep up towards the tilt point (loading or unloading) and the deck starts to move. When unlocked it will come down with body weight if you stand on the edge. Plus I found it helps me locate the CG of the load in regards to getting an appropriate tongue weight / axle weight particularly being only a single axle trailer.That's a neat trailer. I bought my first tilt a few months ago but the deck is hydraulic. I still haven't decided if that's a benefit or a detriment. The only tilt trailers I've used in the past had simple gravity decks with a locking pin.
I suppose it might be tricky pulling a disc or similar onto a gravity tilt trailer but I don't know for sure.
That looks a lot like my tilt trailer.I wish this was my trailer.
I have been meaning to post to this thread for a while. I rented this when I brought the L48 home a couple of years ago or so. It is a power tilt deck over, 14K gvw. It towed down the freeway and on the side roads nicely. The old F-350 enjoyed the work out.
The upside of not having a trailer to move your machine, is that it is always home, when you need it.
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That looks a lot like my tilt trailer.
One thing that's obvious about a deckover trailer is that you can load it from the side without having to work around fenders. This was a useful feature recently when I picked up ten 20ft lengths of 4" pipe. I've picked up pipe in the past using the MidSota utility trailer but I ended up winching (skidding) the pipe off. i could have used pallet forks and straps or the boom pole that I didn't have at the time, but that's a lot more work.
I have a 2006 L48 TLB, and a 14K trailer.True that! Except MAYBE the deck height, there really is no down side to a deck over. I would love to have that trailer, but I just cannot justify the cost based on how much use it would see.
Doug
Fried,I have a 2006 L48 TLB, and a 14K trailer.
I rarely use the trailer, but, even used, (stored inside) it is worth 60% more than I paid for it new 7 years ago.
Generally speaking, my stocks cannot compete!
I only planned to buy ONE trailer.....thus my current 14K trailer.Fried,
I still have the 7K gvw tandem axle flat bed that I bought back in 1992 for $2,000. I guess it probably went up in value also...especially with the new tires, deck, lighting and breakaway system I put on it this past year. Upgrading the size of one's tractor has downstream consequences, like the trailer and attachments being undersized. I guess I'll hang on to the John Deere 855 for that reason.
Doug