Dump Trucks

   / Dump Trucks #41  
still hoping GM starts building them again, it has been a great truck so far and a beast towing.
 
   / Dump Trucks
  • Thread Starter
#43  
ok here is a twist that i've come up with. now this is just speculation but here me out. I'm sitting here with a big smile thinking i need to get a truck quick now.

I'm form Louisiana, and as you all know with the river flooding there is lots of talk about raising the levees around here a couple feet in preparation on the next big flood. Now i'm not so naive to think that i'm going to get that job but i figure the old timers will probably bid it just right and stay busy for a couple years leaving room for some newbie to come in and pick up all their old customers they can't service.

Just thinking out side the box and all but makes me think i might be coming into this at the right time.
 
   / Dump Trucks #44  
BoFuller your approach sounds more like mine. We picked up an 1989 F700 with a 16' flat dump for $2800 in need of tires too. It came with a pintle hitch so when we got the 1983 JD 310B backhoe I picked up a low price tri-axle equipment trailer then found one I liked better and added it should I ever need to haul the BH or 265 MF tractor.

Farm tags run $15 a year and next to nothing for property taxes. By getting a small farm policy the equipment and truck insurance is not too bad. I think it is about $250 a year for the truck.

I had a neighbor who bought a dump truck but he sold it because he could not see paying tags and insurance to do hauling for hire.

It would be cheaper to hire stuff done but like you I just wanted the stuff.:thumbsup: The backhoe comes in handy to pull out the 265 MF when I play too close to a ditch. :D

The farm tags have a second function that is to keep me out of the hauling for for hire business.:laughing: I see no way to make a net profit using old equipment without working your butt off with NO pay.

Since I see not way to make a net profit period so my goal is to have NET FUN. :) By brother and sister both have farms and I can do little jobs for them they would never hire done.

Brought home the new 16.9 x 24 backhoe tires today and that was fun. We are doing things to make this old stuff better that does not take a lot of cash and enjoy doing it. Ten years from now it will bring as much as we paid for it over the past couple years.

If I ever feel the need for these toys to 'pay their way' I will just sell them real fast. :thumbsup: They are for fun work and if they break down and I am not in the mood to fix them they can set a day, week, month or a year as long as they are not blocking the road. :D

When there was the break of storms about a month ago the state highway was totally blocked near my house and it is a main road for OTR trucks so at midnight I went down the only place both lanes were completely blocked with the chainsaw, chain and F700 and go the road open. When it dried up a bit I took the backhoe and started bunching trees on the place that were blocking access to different areas. I used the FEL to clean snow off of the county road where there is a very steep hill to get to my house. When you live in the middle of no where old equipment that will start and run can be nice to have around the place. :thumbsup:
 
   / Dump Trucks #45  
here you go Builder. first was towing a load of wall blocks to a job where the semi wasn't able to get to. second is the Menzi on the trailer. the menzi and trailer combine for close to 10 tons. won't say how much the wall block weighed for fear of self incrimination. The 4500 has no problems with these weights in these east Tn. mountains.
 

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   / Dump Trucks #46  
BoFuller your approach sounds more like mine. We picked up an 1989 F700 with a 16' flat dump for $2800 in need of tires too. It came with a pintle hitch so when we got the 1983 JD 310B backhoe I picked up a low price tri-axle equipment trailer then found one I liked better and added it should I ever need to haul the BH or 265 MF tractor.

Farm tags run $15 a year and next to nothing for property taxes. By getting a small farm policy the equipment and truck insurance is not too bad. I think it is about $250 a year for the truck.

I had a neighbor who bought a dump truck but he sold it because he could not see paying tags and insurance to do hauling for hire.

It would be cheaper to hire stuff done but like you I just wanted the stuff.:thumbsup: The backhoe comes in handy to pull out the 265 MF when I play too close to a ditch. :D

The farm tags have a second function that is to keep me out of the hauling for for hire business.:laughing: I see no way to make a net profit using old equipment without working your butt off with NO pay.

Since I see not way to make a net profit period so my goal is to have NET FUN. :) By brother and sister both have farms and I can do little jobs for them they would never hire done.

Brought home the new 16.9 x 24 backhoe tires today and that was fun. We are doing things to make this old stuff better that does not take a lot of cash and enjoy doing it. Ten years from now it will bring as much as we paid for it over the past couple years.

If I ever feel the need for these toys to 'pay their way' I will just sell them real fast. :thumbsup: They are for fun work and if they break down and I am not in the mood to fix them they can set a day, week, month or a year as long as they are not blocking the road. :D

When there was the break of storms about a month ago the state highway was totally blocked near my house and it is a main road for OTR trucks so at midnight I went down the only place both lanes were completely blocked with the chainsaw, chain and F700 and go the road open. When it dried up a bit I took the backhoe and started bunching trees on the place that were blocking access to different areas. I used the FEL to clean snow off of the county road where there is a very steep hill to get to my house. When you live in the middle of no where old equipment that will start and run can be nice to have around the place. :thumbsup:

That's awesome Gale. I have the pintle hitch also so I have my eye out for a trailer big enough for my tractor. The guy that sold me the truck had a Ziemans dual axle with air brakes, but it was more trailer than I think I need. Besides I was a little short on cash after the tires anyway. I left mine with a mechanic that I trust while I'm in the Phoenix area for a couple weeks. He couldn't find much to fix up, just little stuff. He did call and say the rear brakes were way out of adjustment and were really dragging. After adjusting them, he said it flat out hauls ***** now! :laughing:
Happy Hauling!
 
   / Dump Trucks #47  
here you go Builder. first was towing a load of wall blocks to a job where the semi wasn't able to get to. second is the Menzi on the trailer. the menzi and trailer combine for close to 10 tons. won't say how much the wall block weighed for fear of self incrimination. The 4500 has no problems with these weights in these east Tn. mountains.

Man that's nice. Love the alcoas on her. :thumbsup:
Thanks. I gotta get one of those little 4500/5500's.
 
   / Dump Trucks #48  
Big Bri, I was in a similar situation a few years ago. I bought a F800 similar to what you're looking at and it's been a great investment! Around here EVERYONE has a tandem, tri, quad, or end dump. Most stay busy......BUT I'm about the only one in the area with a single axle. I just wanted to let you know about some of the advantages I've seen in my experience with the smaller truck:
1. Many people don't need 15 to 25 tons of gravel for their driveway, nor do they want to pay 300-400 dollars for a load.
2. A 10ft. bed will dump under limbs and power lines that the big dump trucks can't
3. Most tractor loaders will lift high enough to load you. If they don't just build yourself a little dirt ramp to drive up and give yourself more clearance.
4. Very manuverable in people's yards, etc.
5. If you're looking at the 5.9 Cummins, you'll get pretty good fuel economy and good reliability.
6. The Fords look like a city truck and the cops don't bother you.
7. You can pull equipment around safer than with a pickup. I didn't read all the posts so I don't know if it was specified, but if the truck has an Allison, that's a big bonus. The Lucas Girling brakes are expensive, that's the only complaint with mine. There are lots of low mileage F700 and F800s out there. The 6bt Fords aren't going to get out and run with the big trucks on the highway. They're a little gearbound because they have to be to handle a load like you'll put on it. You can run 65 or so down the highway though.
It sounds like you've been successful with business, so if you use you're savvy in the hauling industry I'm confident you can do well. Find a niche and you'll stay busy. And ADVERTISE too!! You will probably use it around you're place more than you expect too.
 
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   / Dump Trucks #49  
That's awesome Gale. I have the pintle hitch also so I have my eye out for a trailer big enough for my tractor. The guy that sold me the truck had a Ziemans dual axle with air brakes, but it was more trailer than I think I need. Besides I was a little short on cash after the tires anyway. I left mine with a mechanic that I trust while I'm in the Phoenix area for a couple weeks. He couldn't find much to fix up, just little stuff. He did call and say the rear brakes were way out of adjustment and were really dragging. After adjusting them, he said it flat out hauls ***** now! :laughing:
Happy Hauling!

I picked up a 6'8" wide 25' long build with two 25' I-beams and three MH axles in fair shape for $600 but it does not have a beaver tail and the ramps are very very very heavy and 7' long. Now if you can back it into a bank it is not too bad but not safe to use the ramps in my view for a 13K BH. Later I found another one on CL that has the beaver tail/broken back with short ramps with a bed 21' long for $1000. It is solid but the brake way brake battery needs to be replace and the lighting redone but it is 8' wide with the same three axle set up. A logger had it and hauled his swamper on it but had purchased something more like the Ziemans you mentioned.

I started to sell the 25' one then realized it weighs around 4K pounds so is worth nearly what I gave for it for scrap so I decided to keep it to use as a tractor/ATV bridge or just to load stuff on that seldom gets moved but is on wheels when that time comes.

The 25' one I pulled 100 miles at 50-60 MPH and the hubs stayed cool and about 70 miles on the 21' and all was well.

Around here there are not tag requirements for trailers so they will do not cost anything to set around. The big thing is if I really need to get something to the shop or go help my sister I can do it without borrowing a trailer. :thumbsup:
 
   / Dump Trucks #50  
For future reference Summit Racing has the Cardone rebuilt front calipers for the F700 and similar trucks, somewhat inexpensive. I believe these are standard items, not Lucas Girling. Its Cardone part number 100-188005 and they sell for $70 each (unloaded) plus a 30 core. I just bought two last week, the most expensive part was sending the cores back, 23 for shipping.

A-1 CARDONE 100-188005 - A-1 CARDONE Disc Brakes - Overview - SummitRacing.com

I would think they are available form other sources as well, but didn't check.
 

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