Buying a step deck. Should I get the ramps too?

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Kshaw0960, Jan 25, 2023.

  1. Kshaw0960

    Kshaw0960 Road Train Member

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    I’ve been an owner operator for a long time but I haven’t done flatbed in years. There is significantly more freight for flatbed than stepdeck. I did an open search something like 250 miles around Atlanta and only about 200 of the 2200 loads were stepdeck only
     
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  3. Jacoooooooo

    Jacoooooooo Heavy Load Member

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    Yes you need ramps for a step deck. Not because it will make you good money (these loads rarely pay well, unless they are trying to sell you an rgn load and break off the rear end of your $80k trailer).

    It’s because it’ll get you that backhaul load where otherwise you would have to go empty, because again of what others before me said, there’s just so little freight for this type of trailer.

    On the other hand, If you are trying to ensure the investment pays off, it’s probably money better spent to have a set of 10ft drop tarps. Nobody wants these loads, but there’s where you can actually squeeze some $.
     
    Last edited: Jan 27, 2023
  4. ducnut

    ducnut Road Train Member

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    Holy smokes! I would’ve never guessed that kind of price difference.

    If one lived in IL/IN/OH, no question, a flatbed is the way to go. A driver can literally run 24hrs a day, all week long, running steel. I used to do it, pulling a covered wagon, on paper logs, back in the 90’s.

    If I were doing it today, I’d pull a quad-axle w/conestoga.
    671ABA1C-FE1C-4CCD-A8A6-BF544A7292B4.png
     
  5. Driver-John-Doe

    Driver-John-Doe Light Load Member

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    I have never seen one of these before. Why exactly?
     
  6. Banker

    Banker Road Train Member

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    I hauled some Transit Connects out of Kansas City last summer to Birmingham for Circle Logistics out of Ft. Wayne In. The load wasn’t anything I would write home about, it was brokered contract freight which was just ok money. But my load to Kansas City was a home run so it was worth hauling. If you could find overflow freight out of KC that is the big money currently. 8D425090-E7E9-45BC-A50B-A0C78777FBA5.png
     
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  7. ducnut

    ducnut Road Train Member

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    Revenue.

    Back in the day, a lot of guys were pulling double loads, in 2-axle covered wagons (100K-120K pound gross). With a quad, I’d be doing it legally.
     
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  8. ducnut

    ducnut Road Train Member

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    Yesterday, I saw a couple guys rolling similar setups as yours. I can’t help but think the versatility of that rig is the way to go. There really isn’t any 2-axle vehicle you can’t haul.
     
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  9. Banker

    Banker Road Train Member

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    If Carhauling is your gig a stinger is the way to go. Mine is built to haul 10 units, but hauls 3 big units very easily. B25D61B9-8D62-4CD5-A2E1-4E7200C7F5F4.png
     
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  10. Kshaw0960

    Kshaw0960 Road Train Member

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    I was originally looking at a reitnour fully specked out 53’ step with the ramps. Then I found a nice 48’ MAC also fully loaded to the hilt. I added a third 60” box and a dunnage rack. They are also paying me to bring them a trailer they bought so I don’t have to deadhead the 1100 miles to pick it up. Basically saving me $20k from the stepdeck. They are also swapping the boxes for cam lock ones. This has everything the reitnour does but has disc brakes. Plus the reitnour had steel wheel inners.
     

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    Last edited: Jan 27, 2023
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  11. ducnut

    ducnut Road Train Member

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    That’s going to be an awesome trailer.

    Yep. Cam-lock latches are the way. You won’t have to worry about them popping open or Jimmy McMeth prying them open.

    Three boxes! Dunnage rack, too! Haha.

    It always gets me to see a company flatbed rig with the absolute least of equipment. Sure makes being a flatbedder miserable, driving for those companies.
     
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