newbury
Super Star Member
- Joined
- Jan 8, 2009
- Messages
- 14,142
- Location
- From Vt, in Va, retiring to MS
- Tractor
- Kubota's - B7610, M4700
In this thread I describe my $30 HF "pickup truck unloader". It worked fairly well with a sheet of plywood for the base, then I sealed the plywood w/ a floor sealer and it worked a little better.
But I'd like to try to lower the friction even more without spending too much $$.
What ever I put on it will need to be able to take #2 dropped from about 5 feet, so I'm thinking plastic panels won't cut it.
It will also need to take about 110 degree temps without bonding to the unloader fabric, this sort of rules out latex paint.
And I'm trying to keep cost down so a nice 3" thick 4 foot by 8 foot slab of soapstone won't cut it
Suggestions please.
Epoxy paint?
Floor wax?
Sheet of metal?
Thanks in advance.
Oh, and by the way if you've got a pickup this thing is GREAT. It's only supposed to handle 2,000 lbs but for $40 it's great, so much so that I don't mind making 2 trips to keep the weight near a ton and unload twice without shoveling hardly at all.
But I'd like to try to lower the friction even more without spending too much $$.
What ever I put on it will need to be able to take #2 dropped from about 5 feet, so I'm thinking plastic panels won't cut it.
It will also need to take about 110 degree temps without bonding to the unloader fabric, this sort of rules out latex paint.
And I'm trying to keep cost down so a nice 3" thick 4 foot by 8 foot slab of soapstone won't cut it
Suggestions please.
Epoxy paint?
Floor wax?
Sheet of metal?
Thanks in advance.
Oh, and by the way if you've got a pickup this thing is GREAT. It's only supposed to handle 2,000 lbs but for $40 it's great, so much so that I don't mind making 2 trips to keep the weight near a ton and unload twice without shoveling hardly at all.
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