donbecker
New member
- 8
- 8
- 3
- Location
- Phoenix, AZ
Hi,
We're looking at a large raw land purchase in the next year or so, and have two primary needs:
1. Hauling large amounts of stone from local quarry
2. Moving large amount of stuff to the new homestead
For the gravel end of things, initially I started looking at tandem dump trucks, with an eye towards reducing our gravel costs by sourcing direct from the quarry. Eventually selling the truck if we stopped using it. We would likely use it for hauling topsoil as needed.
For the actual move, when we moved to our present location we had the largest Penske rental truck, and it was likely overlimit. We also had a dozen or so of the Uhaul Pods, which were not waterproof, overlimit and we had to deal with Uhaul moving and delivering them, which was a complete hassle.
So this time around, I've been looking at the 20ft shipping containers. Estimating $1500-2000 per container, and I've seen trailers that can haul them for around $6k. They'd be waterproof, we would have no rush to unload them (since we own them) and should be able to sell them and their trailer pretty easy when we're done.
Considering all the above, I've started looking at the M916/M920 trucks.
With the rear winch, I'd be able to use that to pull the shipping containers up on the trailer.
I'm currently researching if I can find a dumptruck sized end dump semi trailer that can handle gravel.
I'd prefer to get one semi truck and use for both tasks instead of getting two trucks. I think budget wise this means I could get one better condition truck than two that need more work/attention.
A third use case would be hauling some smaller excavation equipment around, in a non-commercial capacity.
I spoke with Progressive's Commerical side and for an M931, non-commercial I'd be $84/mo for insurance. I'd be going to get my Class A then, instead of the Class B I planned for the dumptruck.
Does anyone here have experience with the M916/M920 trucks that could share their thoughts?
Eager to hear if anyone feels I've overlooked something.
Going with the M916/M920 I feel could handle any semi-rough terrain on our new land.
We're looking at a large raw land purchase in the next year or so, and have two primary needs:
1. Hauling large amounts of stone from local quarry
2. Moving large amount of stuff to the new homestead
For the gravel end of things, initially I started looking at tandem dump trucks, with an eye towards reducing our gravel costs by sourcing direct from the quarry. Eventually selling the truck if we stopped using it. We would likely use it for hauling topsoil as needed.
For the actual move, when we moved to our present location we had the largest Penske rental truck, and it was likely overlimit. We also had a dozen or so of the Uhaul Pods, which were not waterproof, overlimit and we had to deal with Uhaul moving and delivering them, which was a complete hassle.
So this time around, I've been looking at the 20ft shipping containers. Estimating $1500-2000 per container, and I've seen trailers that can haul them for around $6k. They'd be waterproof, we would have no rush to unload them (since we own them) and should be able to sell them and their trailer pretty easy when we're done.
Considering all the above, I've started looking at the M916/M920 trucks.
With the rear winch, I'd be able to use that to pull the shipping containers up on the trailer.
I'm currently researching if I can find a dumptruck sized end dump semi trailer that can handle gravel.
I'd prefer to get one semi truck and use for both tasks instead of getting two trucks. I think budget wise this means I could get one better condition truck than two that need more work/attention.
A third use case would be hauling some smaller excavation equipment around, in a non-commercial capacity.
I spoke with Progressive's Commerical side and for an M931, non-commercial I'd be $84/mo for insurance. I'd be going to get my Class A then, instead of the Class B I planned for the dumptruck.
Does anyone here have experience with the M916/M920 trucks that could share their thoughts?
Eager to hear if anyone feels I've overlooked something.
Going with the M916/M920 I feel could handle any semi-rough terrain on our new land.