Slightly Overloaded!!

   / Slightly Overloaded!! #11  
40-50 miles would definitely be the max you'd want to go... And would want to stay away from the weigh stations the cops sit at or you'd be looking at a pretty hefty fine.
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #12  
I assumed that this truck is purely an off-road truck, so I would have said: " Pile it higher!"

But 40-50 miles must be on some public roads.
By the looks of the truck (smashed fender, busted flatbed, load, CDL?, etc) it looks like a DOT officers wet dream. It has no rear tag though. Its gotta be an offroad truck. Right?
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!!
  • Thread Starter
#13  
crashz said:
I assumed that this truck is purely an off-road truck, so I would have said: " Pile it higher!"

But 40-50 miles must be on some public roads.
By the looks of the truck (smashed fender, busted flatbed, load, CDL?, etc) it looks like a DOT officers wet dream. It has no rear tag though. Its gotta be an offroad truck. Right?

3 miles on the most rutted logging road I've seen and the rest is on public roads.
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #15  
Legally, based on the 23,100lb GVWR, it's probably over loaded. However, depending on what axles, spring package, frame type, etc it might be well within what the truck was built to haul, no idea on the weight though.
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #16  
By the looks of the truck (smashed fender, busted flatbed, load, CDL?, etc) it looks like a DOT officers wet dream. It has no rear tag though. Its gotta be an offroad truck. Right?

Don't forget the missing lights in the back :D.

Aaron Z
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #17  
My guess would be 32,563.4 lbs. I base this on the length of the shadow, devided by the depth of the snow, multiplied by 2.43. Or I could have just pulled it from my 4th point of contact and have absolutely no idea!:D
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #18  
I think you'd probably be looking at about 425 to 450 kg/m3. So, if those were 8' logs stacked 6' high on a 20' truck bed, it would be about 11,000 to 12,000 kg or about 26,000 lbs.... the extra weight should improve traction, though.
BOB
 
   / Slightly Overloaded!! #19  
Probably more than mine. This figured to be about 5,346# on the back of my '31. Weighed one tie at 243#- there are 22. Springs weren't even fully flat. Wish I could find the picture with telephone poles cut up about 14' long, stacked 2' higher than the top of the roof. When they got to the top of the cab, they pushed them way foreward, I'm assuming to keep the front wheels on the ground, because the load on her in the picture below made the front light, look at where the center of balance is.
 

Attachments

  • 010.jpg
    010.jpg
    90.9 KB · Views: 253
  • 012.jpg
    012.jpg
    93.2 KB · Views: 230
Last edited:
   / Slightly Overloaded!!
  • Thread Starter
#20  
I know that a handful of the logs weighed at least 1000 pounds because the hydraulic bypass was kicking in on the skid steer.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2024 Dig Master DM-F20 Electric Fork Lift, NEW! (A52384)
2024 Dig Master...
1992 SHOP MADE CHASSIS TRAILER (A53843)
1992 SHOP MADE...
2014 MACK GRANITE (A53843)
2014 MACK GRANITE...
2014 DIAMOND C TRAILER MFG. (A50322)
2014 DIAMOND C...
2006 iDrive TDS-2010H ProJack M2 Electric Trailer Dolly (A51694)
2006 iDrive...
2012 Altec WC126A Chipper S/A Trailer (A51691)
2012 Altec WC126A...
 
Top