Hey guys my dad and I have a couple of questions for you. Ive done some searching but havent found any answers really to my questions.
First weve be contemplating getting a MV for a truck to use on the farm. Currently we have 2 2.5ton chevy grain trucks both with gas engines. One is a 66 and the other is a 74. both run pretty good but we also have a semi stretched with a grain box on it and we recently bought a semi and a hopper trailer so we dont really need both these little trucks around. The 74 gets used in the spring as a flatbed to haul seed and pull a fertilizer trailer for planting and it does get used for some other flatbed uses. Well the bed on the 74 is getting pretty sad, its been used to haul grain, cattle, and silage so the sides are shot and the floor isnt the best. So weve been thinking bout selling both of them and getting something diesel with a bed to make it a flatbed part time then use it with a tool boxs, a fuel tank and a welder and some oil tanks as a service truck most of the time with the idea that you can mix and match what we need by pulling some pins or something like the container trucks use.
Anyhow, to the questions we have, neither of us has been around MV before. So weve been reading on here how big 5 tons are. Well in my mind big is relative, are they 2.5 ton chevy truck big or like W900 Kenworth big? Were just trying to gauge size by things we know. CDL isnt a problem, weve both already got one.
We are thinking that we probably wont need both rear axles and would probably just take one off, I think this is refered to as "bobbing" am I correct? So what all is needed and what the procedure for bobbing? A link to where someones done it step by step would be AWSOME! Also what are the "real world" load limits after bobbing? We probably wont be hauling anything too heavy and it should be easier to get around with with a single rear.
Also whats needed to take a truck from 11.00 20s to the super singles i see on trucks here?
The truck we are looking at is a 1985 M925, has anybody ever took the stock bed and made it into a dump bed? It would be nice to have the dumping bed capabilites once in a while.
Thats all I have for now, thanks in advance to all that answer this.
First weve be contemplating getting a MV for a truck to use on the farm. Currently we have 2 2.5ton chevy grain trucks both with gas engines. One is a 66 and the other is a 74. both run pretty good but we also have a semi stretched with a grain box on it and we recently bought a semi and a hopper trailer so we dont really need both these little trucks around. The 74 gets used in the spring as a flatbed to haul seed and pull a fertilizer trailer for planting and it does get used for some other flatbed uses. Well the bed on the 74 is getting pretty sad, its been used to haul grain, cattle, and silage so the sides are shot and the floor isnt the best. So weve been thinking bout selling both of them and getting something diesel with a bed to make it a flatbed part time then use it with a tool boxs, a fuel tank and a welder and some oil tanks as a service truck most of the time with the idea that you can mix and match what we need by pulling some pins or something like the container trucks use.
Anyhow, to the questions we have, neither of us has been around MV before. So weve been reading on here how big 5 tons are. Well in my mind big is relative, are they 2.5 ton chevy truck big or like W900 Kenworth big? Were just trying to gauge size by things we know. CDL isnt a problem, weve both already got one.
We are thinking that we probably wont need both rear axles and would probably just take one off, I think this is refered to as "bobbing" am I correct? So what all is needed and what the procedure for bobbing? A link to where someones done it step by step would be AWSOME! Also what are the "real world" load limits after bobbing? We probably wont be hauling anything too heavy and it should be easier to get around with with a single rear.
Also whats needed to take a truck from 11.00 20s to the super singles i see on trucks here?
The truck we are looking at is a 1985 M925, has anybody ever took the stock bed and made it into a dump bed? It would be nice to have the dumping bed capabilites once in a while.
Thats all I have for now, thanks in advance to all that answer this.