Where is everyone #5
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by DDlighttruck, Aug 27, 2017.
Page 11550 of 22039
-
1951 ford, peterbilt_2005, Feedman and 15 others Thank this.
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
7H3596 looks like a track shoe bolt. Might be able to snag a few used ones this week lol.
Can a guy check the liner height 1 at a time or is it best to clamp all 6 down at once. Can't imagine torqueing down 1 liner at a time would be good for the spacer plate.
Edit: Or is it 7H3598?Last edited: Nov 26, 2019
1951 ford, Feedman, PoleCrusher and 12 others Thank this. -
They do better with the cold though. Heat will kill them in short order if stuck in traffic in the summer during the day.
Piglets won't do well transporting in winter without the winter kit1951 ford, peterbilt_2005, Feedman and 16 others Thank this. -
yeah he's set up for hogs. It's probably not that cold if he's only got that many holes covered.
mine slide into the tracking thats on the outside of the trailer. That way I can remove or add some pieces as the weather changes or if you have to wait somewhere. -
I’m shielding myself from all the “onions and cheese but not butter? You imbecile!” Comments so best keep quiet, peanut gallery
yes that’s blue cheese. Wanted something dressed up what can I say! -
I was just looking at the procedure in SIS. On mine they call for 14 copper washers and an H-bar. I'm assuming on my A that means 4 bolts/washers per liner instead of 6. Looks to me like they use the H-bar and a round adapter plate to pull down harder on the liner? Being that I just had the block machined do you guys think that just torqueing down the bolts and washers at 4 points around each liner would be enough to get an accurate reading?
Sorry for all the questions. Just don't want to F it all up lol. -
Bon appetit Stwik!1951 ford, Feedman, PoleCrusher and 13 others Thank this.
-
I do all 6
7H3598 bolt
8F1484 washer
7k1977 crush washer
I use track pad bolts with head bolt washers under the head then my fibers on bottom -
That procedure and sheet I showed you is right out of an original A book. Not saying they haven't updated the procedure1951 ford, peterbilt_2005, Feedman and 20 others Thank this.
-
An acquaintance of my wife's older brother did a couple years of research in Iowa on shipping hogs. I don't know much about it, but I recall hearing that temperature as well as time of day, length of haul, and some other factors were studied. Maybe spray systems in the trailers to aid in cooling in the summer?
I don't know what any of the conclusions were, but I suspect they confirmed a lot of what you in the industry have known for years.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 11550 of 22039