What kind of bed is on your truck?

   / What kind of bed is on your truck?
  • Thread Starter
#11  
My vote is a 1 ton or 450 with a dump if I had a choice..

At the last RB auction in Atlanta they had about a dozen F450 flatbed dumps 2011-13 model years with the 6.7 Powerstroke. All 2wd, but went in the $20-22k range. Seemed like a lot of truck for the money.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck?
  • Thread Starter
#12  
I justy bought a 19 F250 and a 16' Dump trailer. All bumper pull.
This combo handles everything I need.
The Dump trailer hauls my Kubota 4060 with ease.
The dump trailer haule all my lumber, scrap, rock. dirt. etc I just did 40 trips to the dump, so the trailer paid for itself as here they charge $250.00 ti deliver and pickup a rolloff for the dump.

I just added a goosenech hich so I can now haul either gooseneck, Fifthwheel, of bumper pull.

I had a F450 flatbed and for eevryday use it was too tall to load and unload items. Great if all you do is load and unload with a forklidt but I never do.
The F250 6.7 pulls as strong as the F450 6.0 did probably better for sure a lot smoother as it's my daily driver also and the F450 stak body just wasn't a daily driver.

That sounds like a sweet combo. I have seen a couple of gooseneck dumps with sides that fold down for loading.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck?
  • Thread Starter
#13  
I have a 1 ton with a dump bed. And I’ll never own another regular bed truck. It’s the difference between owning a tractor and having a tractor with a loader. A flat bed wouldn’t be too bad. Mine is a 3500 DRW truck but a 450 class truck would be a lot better. I haven’t found a 1.5 ton dump that I like so I have a 6500 dump too.View attachment 614143View attachment 614144View attachment 614147

I like that analogy. I have a feeling that if I get a small dump I'll never understand how I got by without one.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck? #15  
How heavy are you wanting to haul on the bed of the truck? Even with a less than ideal bumper pull trailer a 3500 DRW will easily move a 6600 pound tractor.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck?
  • Thread Starter
#16  
I think hauling 6-8k comfortably on the bed would be pretty cool. That would be all kinds of things - building materials, logs, rock - both on-road and off.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck? #17  
I do that to my poor 1 ton but a 450 would be way better for doing that. I’ve had a project 3500HD for a while that I was planning on putting a dump bed on but since I bought the Topkick I doubt that’ll ever happen. Hauling off road is hard on a truck.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck? #18  
At the trailer and bodywork shop i worked years ago, we did a few chassis-cabs with a 5th wheel for landscapers: as a 5th wheel tractor they took 8.5 ton trailers, to take diggers and skidsteers to estates. When they had a job in the city, the locked a flatbed on the 5th wheel, assisted by two extra catches on the front to prevent it from tilting.

This way they didnt need a gooseneck to get down into a bed over the sides, so there was room for toolboxes and excavator buckets on the first part of trailer bed above the 5th wheel. And putting on the flatbed with dropsides, they could just park the trailer, pick up the flatbed with pallet forks, and run it into the 5th wheel locking mechanism as easy as mounting a trailer.

You could even make the removable bed a dump if you want, or have two swap beds: a flatbed and a service body...
That is, if the trucks net weight capacity allows this much freedom, off course a dedicated, fixed flatbed would weigh a few 100 pounds less.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck? #19  
I think a flatbed with a dump trailer would work well. I'm currently renting a 4yard dump trailer to move some dirt and it's pretty slick.
 
   / What kind of bed is on your truck? #20  
Haven't gotten one yet, but I'm looking at the 3500 class of trucks - likely one under a 10k gross limit so I can hopefully avoid having to deal with different requirements of different states for operating "commercial" trucks. From what I've seen some states actually require a CDL for any vehicle over 10,000lb gross weight. .....and at some weight a street legal vehicle can no longer be insured under a personal policy, and instead requires a commercial insurance policy (even if the vehicle is only used for personal purposes).

If that wasn't a concern, I'd personally go buy the smallest hook-lift truck capable of carrying a 20ft bed (with suitable weight capacity margin) ....and then go buy a few different beds/bodies -- and then start buying 20ft ISO containers for use on and off the truck.
 

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