Gooseneck dump trailer

   / Gooseneck dump trailer #11  
I was in the same boat as you 6 months ago and I went with Midsota and I highly recommend them.
Midsota trailers are painted with PPG, not powdercoated like most of the southern built trailers. They also have a galvanized option.
Their 10K axles are not hand assembled dexter but instead computer assembled Lippert with very consistent modern day build quality.
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer #12  
I have a Parker dual tandem deckover with 4' sides. Trailer works great but gets a little bouncy when loaded up, but I think that is the nature of the beast. Trailer is about 4 years old and we use it mostly for compost and mulch for the orchard and it will hold over 18 yards when loaded up. Only downside is it is like pulling a giant parachute behind the truck - mileage has been as low as 8.5 on the Ford. No stability or towing problems, but a dually is recommended. I highly recommend getting a power tarp setup - trying to tarp something this tall (even with just 2' sides) would truly suck especially if there is a little wind.
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer #13  
I used to have a 16' Bri-Mar tandem dually that I had bought used in 08'. Typical powder coat paint but metal work and welding top notch in my eyes anyway. It did not have ramps but what with the bed floor being maybe four feet off of the ground, it would have not been for the faint of heart to load a piece of equipment on. Not to mention some pretty stout ramps. It pulled and handled well with my 12v Dodge as long as I kept the fuel filter clean. Much better with my FL70, the bed of which you can see in the following photo.
 

Attachments

  • 100_0697.JPG
    100_0697.JPG
    1.5 MB · Views: 167
   / Gooseneck dump trailer
  • Thread Starter
#14  
I found one with a 8k axles and 19,200 gvwr, which is probably enough, but the "cut & rut" 17.5 singles are a problem for me.
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I don't think Midsota offers a trailer with 96" of clear span between the sides
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer #17  
One third of my trailer fleet is PJ and I would highly recommend them. My dump trailer is 8 years old and is used for commercial landscaping. Has held up very well.
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer #18  
The problem is most of them do powder coat. Powder coat is great, until it is compromised, then, it flakes off. You can稚 repaint as the paint won稚 bond to the powder coat and steel gap, always leaving the next place to flake.

I got mine done in automotive paint. Easily grinned off to be welded in and repainted. The hard part is finding a good company that still uses automotive paint.

My 20' equipment trailer is powder coated, and I do agree with the chipping issue.
I did not choose powder coating. The new trailer came that way.
That said: Two part marine epoxy paint seems to work very well to touch up chipped powder coating.
If I could get a new trailer completely coated with two part marine epoxy I would be a happy guy.
Nearly all new trailers and implements seem to have cheap paint work.

There is a wonderful two part product available called "Amerkok-400" by the Ameron Corp (PPG in USA)).
It is an industrial product, so is not sold by retailers.
PPG distributors have it throughout the USA, but it ain't cheap.
I have used it on steel, and on concrete (garage floor).
It is often used on water towers, and steel bridges.
I put two coats on our salt water spalled concrete sea wall 15 years ago, and it still looks great.
 
Last edited:
   / Gooseneck dump trailer #19  
I had a Load Trail 14K gooseneck dump trailer. I had it overloaded (farm plates) multiple times hauling gravel and it didn't care. I sold it because I didn't use it enough, but the thing was very well built.
I have a Big Tex 20K gooseneck and I believe the build quality of the Load Trail was better.

I've never really cared about the paint, the trailer is a tool and paint doesn't affect functionality. Dad has a 1992 32' gooseneck without almost no paint left and it still hauls just fine.
 
   / Gooseneck dump trailer
  • Thread Starter
#20  
Found a Load Trail triple 7K axle trailer at a great price. Has oversized scissor hoist, dual jacks and primer paint. $10,995 21,000 GVWR.
Seems you can't get a dual tandem with fold down sides and 96" width between sides, so it looks like a triple axle single wheel is probably going to be my only realistic choice.
Also found a BWise dual 8k oil bath axle single wheel dual hydraulic jacks, too which is a really nice trailer for $13,300. 19,200 GVWR

$2,300 buys a lot of fuel, insurance, etc.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2007 FORD F-450 SUPER DUTY (A52472)
2007 FORD F-450...
2016 FREIGHTLINER CASCADIA TANDEM AXLE SLEEPER (A52577)
2016 FREIGHTLINER...
2011 GLOBAL 130BBL VAC TRAILER (A52472)
2011 GLOBAL 130BBL...
https://www.accessnewswire.com/newsroom/en/healthcare-and-pharmaceutical/nerve-alive-supplement-reviews-inspired-by-nervecalm-for-natural-nerv-1044754
https://www.accessn...
2008 ELGIN SWEEPER (A52472)
2008 ELGIN SWEEPER...
2015 FORD F-550 SUPER DUTY (A52472)
2015 FORD F-550...
 
Top