I think the cameraperson should have been further back and that weird tall skinny picture should have been skinnier and taller. Just my two cents, hope this helps. Maybe in your next video. Art from Ohio
Choosing the right size….. yeah it’s easy …. It’s always better to have bigger size trailer than having a to small of a trailer…. But with how much the trailers cost …. Get the bigger one so you don’t need more than one trailer… my opinion…
Generally speaking, I agree with you but the reason we bought these was due to customer demand. Contractors that need a dump trailer but are tight on space.
Loadtrail makes tilt trailers as well, my son just picked up a Loadtrail car hauler 14000#, not a tilt bed but with the slide in ramps so he can load anything and no ramps in the way. Love the drive over fenders and the d rings on it are sick. Very solid trailer and you can get them with the hyd. Jacks as well. Hard to compare brands when you don’t have similar trailers to say which is better. All good, just wanted to point a few things out.
I just picked up a lightly used 2020 MAXXD car trailer. So far I am very impressed with it. I had never heard of the brand so I am looking up reviews just making sure I spent my money well I guess. Not mad at myself so far though. Mine is a Steel deck 7k car hauler and is 83 wide between the fenders which was something I looked for. Fitting a winch up to it and fixing a couple little things. Good stuff.
This is a 2 answer question ... currently we're using a WordPress site and Square for the billing... but this is actually a horrible system that creates a lot of extra manual work. We're switching to a new system to automate sales, scheduling, and many other items. I'll post the new software name after we launch and are certain it's as good as expected.
You're 100% correct! I'll just add that handling and safety are a problem that can easily be a problem when your truck is not rated for the load behind the truck. Nothing worse than the trailer "tail wagging the dog effect"... that can literally flip your entire trailer / vehicle - very dangerous!
I am looking into trenchers for a job where we have to excavate below the frost line which is approx 5' for electrical and plumbing. Trencher seems faster. Only question and concern I have is once the trencher removes the dirt, won't we need another equipment or guys with shovels to remove the dirt to clear the path to run electrical and plumbing lines. Maybe the trencher works well if you just running one pipe but what about if we have several pipes to run for electrical and mechanical?
If you're going 5 feet down, you'll need a much larger trencher - usually a machine mounted unit for a Skid Steer or something larger. This Barreto trencher reaches a depth of 3 feet and it comes with a "back fill blade" to push the dirt back into the trench when you're ready to fill and move on.