dunnage placement advice

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by ford06, Aug 24, 2017.

  1. ford06

    ford06 Bobtail Member

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    what is the proper placement of dunnage trying to lean as much as i can how many do you carry? placement on loads like flat steel i beams lumber pipe some exampels of different loads would help pics also thanks
     
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  3. DDlighttruck

    DDlighttruck Road Train Member

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  4. ChaoSS

    ChaoSS Road Train Member

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    Placement depends on the arch of the deck and how much of that arch will disappear when you add the weight onto it. That depends on your trailer.
     
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  5. kylefitzy

    kylefitzy Road Train Member

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    We leaned our dunnage per truck way out. As in we don't carry dunnage. If the customer wants dunnage we want them to have exactly what they want. So they supply it.
     
  6. snowwy

    snowwy Road Train Member

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    not everyone has dunnage to give and some that do usually want to charge.

    Depending on your freight. Could be 4, could be as much as 16. 12 is a good number to have though
     
  7. Dye Guardian

    Dye Guardian Road Train Member

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    12 is also what I carry.
     
  8. Jumbo

    Jumbo Road Train Member

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    It also depends on what the piece looks like underneath.
     
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  9. ChaoSS

    ChaoSS Road Train Member

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    He's talking pipe and I beams though, so we can simplify it a bit.


    Our company wants 8 on each trailer, which I tend to find inadequate, so I try to keep a few shorter pieces for coils and such. At least with our shippers, they generally only want dunnage under the bottom layer and they tend to provide for whatever needs to go between layers.
     
    LWT104 Thanks this.
  10. m16ty

    m16ty Road Train Member

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    You need dunage. If you don't have any, there will come a time when somebody wants to load something and doesn't have any to use. What they will do is slide the forks out from under the load and have it sit flat on the trailer. Then on the unload, they will have to wedge the forks under the load. This can really tear up your trailer.

    I'd say a bear minimum of 6 four-bys, 8' long. More would be better. Most people store them in Landing gear braces on flats and in the under deck side braces on steps. With either of these places, they really aren't taking up any usable space.
     
  11. brsims

    brsims Road Train Member

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    I carry eight 4x4s, seven foot long beveled.

    I generally only use two on a load, rarely four.

    Your dunnage requirements are based on your freight. Long freight (pipe, tubing, i-beams, stuff loke that) will require more dunnage. Gerdau generally wants a minimum of 8 boards, for example. Short freight or coils don't need as much, unlesss you carry a lot of coils (my highest number has been 5, all very light)
     
    ford06 Thanks this.
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