I believe they have some other frames that are specifically for granite. They include them briefly during the securement training in Little Rock.
Finding granite haulers
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by Bsheff, Sep 27, 2016.
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Yes this a frame on my trailer is made just for hauling granite slabs.
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Do granite slabs have to be hauled standing up? Could you load them flat on a trailer using Styrofoam on the deck and in between the layers like we do with sidewalk pavers?
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Ya I haul them for a living and know the trips and tricks.
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Depends on the tickness. -
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Lol, my father in law does granite counters, and yes, all granite slabs have to stay on edge, except when actually being worked on (but then it is on a special flat work rack), or is installed on the counter.
And even then, it is pretty common for one to crack or shatter. Some of the semi-prefab ones (bull nose already on, and cut to standard width) even have a thick fiberglass mesh epoxied to the back side because it was weak.
Granite is not a sturdy material! -
It's a pretty sturdy material if you know how to properly handle it. Most slabs these days have fiberglass mesh epoxied on the back. It's just becoming common practice. I'm actually headed to the great state of California today to pick up a bunch of slabs. I'll post some pictures of how there loaded ect to show you guys who are unfamiliar with the process on how it's done.
mastllc, Ke6gwf, daf105paccar and 2 others Thank this.
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