What type of freight are you guys carrying that is so sensitive? (honest question, I have no clue about this)
Yes, it's a big secret ... Not.
See this FedEx web page.
What type of freight are you guys carrying that is so sensitive? (honest question, I have no clue about this)
Actually Phil , your use of the roll-up along with the Cloud's ( excuse me if mis-spelled ) happiness with their's gave me the confidence to order it. Another reason to thank you for posting your spec's.
I would think that insulation would be key in determining roll-up door performance on a reefer truck. A well insulated door would perform better than a poorly insulated one.
For the reasons Zorry states, roll-up doors are the way to go.
Diane and I were once on a run from New York to Washington state with a DR-unit with barn doors. After loading, we were quickly back to temp. We waited a long time for the DR-unit to get back to temp. The barn doors had to be opened before bumping the dock and the shipper was slow to load. All the precondition the DR-unit did before arrival was wasted and the freight was loaded into a warm truck body. We bumped the dock with the door closed and opened it just seconds before the freight was loaded. We often close the door behind us when securing reefer freight to preserve temperature. It takes no time at all to get back to temp and the customer's freight is better protected.
With that DR-unit, we ran at the same temp along the same route. Just before the delivery, we parked our trucks side by side and I was able to shoot both doors with our infrared thermometer. The exterior temp of both doors was the same anywhere I shot the painted surfaces (top, bottom, middle, corners, etc.). The temp was also the same anywhere I shot the metal surfaces (hinges on the barn door, frame on the roll-up). The roll-up frame exposes more metal to the outsdie but both trucks held temp just fine. We ordered a high quality door with our truck build.
Once in a while, actually just twice in six years, when the set point is -10 Fahrenheit and we are running cross country on hot, humid days, the roll up door will freeze shut on the inside (no frost on the outside is visible). A single football-style shoulder block on the door loosens it up.
Phil,how much,if any, work have you done to the OH door ?
I will replace my seal within the first year and adjust the door for side to side movement.
Not a problem, yet,I inspect it on every load and just know it's not 100%.
The door was painted when we had the body painted (ghosting of old graphics). The bolts were replaced that hold small part of the door latch (where the padlock goes through) onto the door (rust). Bolts would have been fine if left alone but FedEx wanted bolt heads turned around. We replaced door seals for the first time just a few weeks ago.
To me that's amazing. So little done in 5 or 6 years. Any secrets or lube tips ?
do you ever smoke test the box, to check for leaks