High Compression
Platinum Member
i hauled a 580 super m with 4wd 4 and 1 bucket cab with my 2008 chevy 2500 with a daul tadem gooseneck and went about 100 miles round trip with it then i hauled a 580 b and a ford 2000 to oklahoma on the same truck and trailer it all depends on how u load the backhoe and get the weight balanced i had no problems pulling both loads but the trailer has new 14ply tires and 12k alxes but a 4500 would pull that backhoe any where
As I pointed out before. There is at least 4000 lbs difference between a 580 and a 590. I wouldn't move either, regularly with anything less than a class 6 truck with air brakes on truck and trailer. I have been hauling equipment for 15 years, starting out with F-Superdutys (the 92-97 F-450) with powerstrokes and five speeds every day Mon-Fri on goosenecks with electric brakes. Now I want to slap everyone I see, hauling anything more than a skid loader with that sort of set up. I just hope DOT get's them. It is unsafe, most of the time illegal, and most if not all of those drivers are inexperienced with hauling more than 10,000 lbs.
The 2500-5500 trucks or 250-550 if you like, do not have enough weight or stopping power to control a load over 10,000 lbs. in an emergency situation. I don't want my family driving down the highway next to a guy that is pulling a piece of equipment and trailer that weighs twice as much as his 2500 pick-up that he's pulling it with. When a tire blows and you loose what little control you thought you had at 70mph, it is game over for you and the vehicles around you. I've watched as the wrecker picks up the backhoe from the other side of the concrete divider wall on the highway that it and part of the trailer ended up in on coming traffic as the gooseneck ripped the back half of the 2500 completely off the truck. The bad thing is, that the driver and passenger of the 2500 survived, but the family van that was hit, did not have any survivors.