putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed

   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #21  
A "1/4-ton truck", if there is such a thing, would indicate to me that its bed can carry only 500 pounds (aka 1/4 ton).

Heck my little Kawasaki Mule 610 (the smaller one) can carry almost that much (400 lbs)!!!
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #22  
that's not what it indicates..

soundguy
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed
  • Thread Starter
#24  
300 miles *ouch*

i would say take a trailer, or open up some yellowpages.com and search for shippers near that area. or less you have not bought it yet.

rottery cutter 300 miles, just seems like spinning wheels. or less local stuff is that outrages and this 300 miles is that good of a deal. i would hope the cutter is new.

I did some shopping on new BB720's. Here are the results:

PA - $2550 no tax
CT - $2900 + $175 tax = $3075
NH - $3160 no tax

I thought the PA deal was worth the time and drive to get it.
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #25  
Why own a trailer if you are not going to use it? No way I would put it on any of my 3 trucks. Just pay the fuel penalty, not much behind a diesel truck with that light of a load, and take the trailer.

You are over thinking this.

Chris

+1...use the trailer!
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #26  
I did some shopping on new BB720's. Here are the results:

PA - $2550 no tax
CT - $2900 + $175 tax = $3075
NH - $3160 no tax

I thought the PA deal was worth the time and drive to get it.

I think it's generally accepted that it costs a person about 50 cents a mile to drive their vehicle. (may be higher for trucks, but I'll use 50 cents)

You posted "~300 miles down to PA", so I'll assume that's one way, meaning 600 miles round-trip, meaning it'll cost you $300 in vehicle usage. That brings the total cost up to $2,850 ($2,550 + $300). The difference between your CT dealer's ($3,075) & $2,850 is $225. If you average 60 mph, the round-trip should take about 10 hours, meaning you'll basically be making $22.50 per hour for your time ($225 / 10). Of course, if you have other reasons to go to PA, then ... :)
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #27  
3/4 ton is not the payload capacity sir. A 3/4 ton pickup such as the Ford F-250 will carry as much as 4080 lbs in payload in the bed. I know the naming system referencing 3/4 ton is strange but that is how it is and you aren't going to change it via a post on TBN.

Your ranger did not share frame, axles, transmission or engine with the full size fords of that era or any era. I don't disagree that compacts can carry a good load, but that does not make it a 250/2500 series 3/4 ton pickup truck!

Looks like we have to split the difference. A Ranger capacity is 1260 lbs (see the chart in this link. The capacity is listed about 2/3rds-3/4 down the chart. BTW, 2004 was the oldest I could find with a capacity listing. My old Ranger was a '92 and had helper springs (didn't look aftermarket, but I did buy the truck used).

Why would you think any truck would have to share components with the F-250? The loads are based upon the design of the components. A 3/4 ton compact truck is still a 3/4 ton truck. And Ford used 3/4 ton components (still do, I guess) on the 4x4's since the trucks are expected to see more severe service.
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #28  
Looks like we have to split the difference. A Ranger capacity is 1260 lbs (see the chart in this link. The capacity is listed about 2/3rds-3/4 down the chart. BTW, 2004 was the oldest I could find with a capacity listing. My old Ranger was a '92 and had helper springs (didn't look aftermarket, but I did buy the truck used).

Why would you think any truck would have to share components with the F-250? The loads are based upon the design of the components. A 3/4 ton compact truck is still a 3/4 ton truck. And Ford used 3/4 ton components (still do, I guess) on the 4x4's since the trucks are expected to see more severe service.

I have to support the fact that there has never been a 3/4-ton Ranger. The designation of tonnage is a "nominal" one not a literal one. Much in the same way that a "2x4" board is not 2" by 4".

From Wikipedia:
Full-size pickups in North America are sold in four size ranges - 1/2 Ton, 3/4 Ton, 1 Ton, and now 1 1/2 ton. These size ranges originally indicated the maximum payload of the vehicle, however modern pickups can typically carry far more than that. For example, the 2006 model Ford F-150 (a "1/2 Ton" pickup) has a payload of between 1,400 lb (640 kg) and 3,060 lb (1,390 kg), depending on configuration. Likewise, the 2006 model F-350 (a "1 Ton" pickup) has a payload of between 4,000 lb (1,800 kg) and 5,800 lb (2,600 kg) depending on configuration.

The Ranger was simply considered a compact pickup (regardless of it's hauling capacity). To most people when you refer to a 3/4 ton pick up you are talking about a "full-sized" pick up. For Ford that would have been an F-250 designation. A 1-ton, capable of way more than a ton of weight is an F-350 and so on. His point is that the ranger shared no parts with the truck that was designated as a 3/4 ton pick up, the F-250.

Perhaps is just semantics, but I think you'll get this a lot if you refer to a ranger by it's hauling capacity of 3/4 of a ton. For the same reason I refer to my F-350 has a 1 ton, not a 2.9 ton. :)

Oh, and I vote use a trailer. :)
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #29  
Look I'm not sure if you are purposely doing this as egging people on or what. A ranger DOES NOT and HAS NOT been constructed using 3/4 ton truck components. There is not a 3/4 ton compact truck class. Doesn't exist in north america.

The 4x4's or 2x4's do not use 3/4 ton truck components, the use compact truck components.

The 4x4 ranger used Ford 7.5 or 8.8 semi-float rear axles. A 3/4 ton of that vintage uses a 10.25" full floater Sterling axle.

A ranger uses a lightweight transmission produced by Mazda. A 3/4 ton used the huge ZF-5 manual transmission.

The smallest engine available in the 3/4 ton was a 302 V-8. At the time, there were no V-8's in the 1/4 ton chassis. Later, the explorer which partly shared the chassis became available with a V-8. The ranger never did get a v-8.

The ranger is not a 3/4 ton truck. The 3/4 ton or 250/2500 class is all full size trucks and nowadays has nothing to do with the payload capacity of the truck.

The same is true of 1/2 tons. You can't call it a 1 ton just because it has a 1 ton payload capacity.


Why would you think any truck would have to share components with the F-250? The loads are based upon the design of the components. A 3/4 ton compact truck is still a 3/4 ton truck. And Ford used 3/4 ton components (still do, I guess) on the 4x4's since the trucks are expected to see more severe service.
 
   / putting a rotary cutter on top of pickup bed #30  
Another link explaining that the name has nothing to do with it's capacity:

Truck Tonnage

"A common belief is that a half-ton truck has only a half-ton capacity. This rule would have accurately applied to pickup trucks built before the 1960s, intense competition between the Detroit Three automakers provoked drastic increases in payload hauling abilities. Manufacturers currently acknowledge that the tonnage ratings is meant only to define a the duty level of pickup truck. "
 

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