Man, I would totally love have one of those to sweep out all the crap that people leave in my trailer which gathers towards the nose. I'd drop it right in their parking lot where it belongs.
Stupid Question about dry van.
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by Kruse Family Farms, Aug 30, 2024.
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You may want to fill the gouges in the floor with Key Polymer Crack Filler, and use their epoxy Floor Restore afterwards to seal it, so forklift drivers don’t tear up the floor more then it already is.
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We used to haul wheat on flatbeds to get to the lumber in North Idaho. Reefers would use it to get to their produce loads in WA. Swift would use it to get their vans back to Lewiston to the paper mill. Then 15 years ago or so they started building rail facilities all over to load the 110 car trains and it all went away.Kruse Family Farms, SmallPackage and Siinman Thank this. -
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We had soft side kits, one piece for each side and they overlapped a little on the ends. They had metal hooks that went into the top of the stakes and loops toward the bottom to hold the bottoms out against the stakes. They came in about 18” onto the deck and the weight of the wheat basically held them on the trailer.
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