I am looking for a drop frame van, the Great Dane, Dorsey, etc are usually way less expensive than Kentucky trailers, even the ones without side doors. Why do movers prefer Kentucky trailers, are they stronger, they aren't lighter? The trailers I am looking at primarily are "auto drop" I have heard Wabash trailers are not the best built, how do Great Dane, Trailmobile and, Stoughton compare to Kentucky in the drop frame segment?
Steve
Why HHG use Kentucky?
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Steve from hutch, May 15, 2018.
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Quality is more important than price.
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That is the crux of this, what defines the quality of a Kentucky over the other makers?
Steve -
I have not owned a moving van. I do however have a kentucky horse trailer. The thing is built solid. It's over 30 years old, and if i was still in that segment of trucking i'd think nothing of running it another 30 years. Assuming they build their moving vans the same way they built this trailer it should hold up long after the cheap brands have rotted away.
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Frito Lay used them exclusively when I was there. They didn’t leak anywhere including the side doors, which they had 3 of. My former coworker who I talk to regularly says they are now using Great Dane which he says aren’t built like Ky and they leak. I think you get what you pay for and Ky trailers are definitely quality. Can you get another brand that works for you, maybe you can.Mike2633 Thanks this.
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I use to run a Kentucky trailer with North Amaerican Van Lines. Not a bedbugger but electronics. Basically the same trailer. The trailer was super tight. Never any leaks anywhere. The floors on the trailer were polished hardwood and looked as good as floors in a lot of homes. Made it easier to move heavy stuff around when you it was necessary. Multi million dollar loads were common and these shippers expected us to be using the best equipment for these loads.
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I know the Kentucky trailers are well built, that is a given. In what methods and processes are they different than other trailers? I agree the tightness is a big part of the equation, how do they MAKE that much difference? Are the extrusions thicker or deeper than other builders? It is easy to say they are well built and hold their shape, tell me why they do when other trailers don't?
I am honestly looking for the reasons they do so well. On truck paper the price difference is remarkable even 20 year old trailers have high asking prices.
Steve -
Kentucky trailers are over engineered, they use quality fitting that last. We have Kentucky's that are 20 years old. We maintain them and they never let us down.
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Well now we are getting somewhere, over engineered is maybe engineered like it should be instead of "cost engineered"
Thanks, Sharky
SteveLepton1 Thanks this. -
I've owned a Kentucky and currently own a Great Dane. There is no comparison the Great Dane is a good trailer but not the same class
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