I have 14 wenches and straps specifically for loads like this. Weaving the straps through is a pain, but it works, i wouldve also used a bulkhead front and back. Ive yet to turn down a load, but i do complain about the amount of work vs reward.
Refused my first load today
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Chewy352, Aug 30, 2016.
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Oh and chewy. Invest in more straps and winches and or 4 inch ratchets.
Ruthless Thanks this. -
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There are ways to secure that without a crazy number of straps and chains. The front half that was 4 bundles wide. I can think of 3 ways to secure it. 2 would work with chain or straps one would be chain only. the rear stack though would limit you to one way.
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Chewy352 Thanks this.
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Looks like a Gerdau special.
From what I've gathered, pretty much every location but the one here in Manitoba ships out their product like this.
And this is something my Gerdau insists all trucks use when the customer requires vertical blocking (for crane lifts). They even supply them freely.
I'm going to need to take a picture the next time I'm there.DSK333, Lepton1, daf105paccar and 5 others Thank this. -
Dye Guardian and Chewy352 Thank this.
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Hot rolled steel like that vertical bracing is of not much use. The only side load you would get is what the crane operator put on it. Your straps/chains would add nothing as they would not pull the outside stacks in. Nothing wrong with the way it was loaded and not hard to secure. 4X4s stacked and chained down as a bulkhead in the front and the rear. Then it's am a matter of strapping/chaining straight over the top. The load is contained.
If you want to put down pressure on the middle bundles you could place a 4X4 on top of the them (under your tie down of course). 5 bundles wide add a 2X4 to the middle bundle.
Where there were four bundles wide you could also go over the outside bundle and then choke the two middle with chain. If you place your binder in the center it would give a very even pull.
Hot rolled steel is rough it does not tend to slide. Chains do work well on it as they will bite in. You will not hurt it as its not a "finished" product. But you have listen to the shipper/receivers demands.
Stick to your decision if you don't think you can haul it safely then don't. Better safe than sorry. But just because "everybody does it" does not mean it's wrong either.flatbed85 and Dye Guardian Thank this. -
Now, that said: when I got one of those loads, I used 2" straps and ratchets to weave through the bundles (2 "weaves" on each end of each group) plus my normal 4" winch straps over the top. Ran them up to Pittsburgh on a somewhat regular basis with zero problem and zero movement.
After the first time, it doesn't even take that long to weave the 2" straps through. An additional 3-5 minutes of work, and I'm down the road. As has beem said before, there's more than one way to skin a cat....or haul a load.Lepton1, Dye Guardian, Highway Sailor and 1 other person Thank this.
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