. . . he might throw a few hints to us little people]
I didn't know you were part of the family.
. . . he might throw a few hints to us little people]
The system uses clips that hook into the current horizontal etrac on your cargo box walls which in turn, the clips hold 5 foot sections of etrac vertically. With the clipped in etrac you can then move the load bars up and down vertically as needed. There is an optional screw bar that allows you to transfer pressure placed on the load bars (As Jack deduced) directly to the deck. The screw bars are simple and strong with a flat u-shaped piece that fits the underside of the load bar and the other end has is 3”x4” 1/8” plate with a thin rubber pad. I have found that placing a little up pressure on the screw bars prior to cargo loading works better that trying to adjust the screw bars after the skids are loaded. The vertical pieces of etrac also have small plates weld at the ends so as not dig the wood or scar your deck. The clips do require a knock with a hammer to seat them and also to
remove them.
Have had two occasions where the quintessential fork lift driver has pushed a pallet along the wall and caught the vertical etrac and bent it. I have had no success straitening etrac, so just have to replace if it happens.
Really, you guys make it funnier every day we are in trucking.
Lugnut wrote:
Hey di you hear the one about?!?!? Just keep up with the 2 drink minimum and we get fubbier as the night goes on!!
Lugnut wrote:
Hey didya hear the one about......?!?!? Just keep up with the 2 drink minimum and we get funnier as the night goes on!!
Personally I will stick with what will fit on my floor. If the customer has more than what will fit on my truck there are two options. 1: leave what wont fit for another truck or 2: call my carrier and order a tractor. Those are the ONLY options. There are good reasons for this stance and are as follows.
~ high center of gravity that comes with decking freight
~ the need to carry and store extra equipment/weight for the random load that may come along
~ taking more risk of a forklift driver causing damage to my truck
~ taking more risk that the freight will get damaged in transit
~ carriers are more and more doing away with the practice of decking
~more skids doesn't mean more money, I don't get paid by the piece I get paid by the mile
Work smarter not harder, if it doesn't fit on the floor it would mean more work.
So is there a "super trucker" badge that comes with fitting more skids, or is it just for bragging rights and for the "look at me look at me" that comes with it? One thing to remember is a pat on the back is only inches away from a kick in the a$$.
Oh and so I'm "allowed" to post in this thread my answer to the question is NO
Posted with my Droid EO Forum App
Dude, the question is, are you using a pallet stacking system? I can count your response as no.
Ah, let me get this right, I ask a question and I get questions. The question was legitimate, clear and concise. A yes or no shouldn’t be much to ask, don’t you think?
"one reason I started this thread was to get the opinion from those who are using some sort of method for handling more than their deck capacity of freight as to what they feel is a safe weight per pallet for the method they use."
Really?
"The question was legitimate, clear and concise. A yes or no shouldn’t be much to ask, don’t you think?"
I though you just wanted yes or no answers.