Hopper, Dump O/O's & Drivers

Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by wheathauler, May 31, 2009.

  1. bullhaulerswife

    bullhaulerswife Forum Leader/Admin Staff Member Administrator

    28,270
    44,358
    Jul 23, 2007
    Midwest
    0
    Possibly cracks in the supports and frame over time from "shaking" loads? Wow, that picture is unreal. But I've never seen one loaded to the gills like that either, except when we were hauling hulls, but we were lucky to hit 76-77k with those loads stuffed to the brim.
     
    wheathauler Thanks this.
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. wheathauler

    wheathauler Trucker

    2,031
    584
    Mar 10, 2009
    Hutch, Kansas
    0
    I was thinking same thing when I saw how high that corn was piled. I have a 66 inch side and with good weighing corn a person can't usually see much of the corn piled up. I'm talking about legal weight now... not that I would ever overload. :biggrin_25525: Most I ever weighed when coming out of field was 96,000...sweating bullets no DOT was around.
     
    dairyman and bullhaulerswife Thank this.
  4. rollin coal

    rollin coal Road Train Member

    13,269
    26,726
    Mar 29, 2008
    TN
    0
    Well somebody had a bad day that really puts my bad day in the right perspective lol
     
    bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
  5. kwforage

    kwforage Road Train Member

    1,047
    472
    Jun 3, 2007
    Wisconsin
    0
    Actually it doesn't seem to be that overloaded. I see them at the Co-op around here all the time mounded way up in the center and it would run over the side if the tarp weren't on. I realize the rear hopper dumped out, but the front doesn't look super full. My guess would be corrosion and heavy loads took its toll over time and it finally gave.
     
    bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
  6. wheathauler

    wheathauler Trucker

    2,031
    584
    Mar 10, 2009
    Hutch, Kansas
    0
    Like your trucks kw. Good looking silage outfit, much nicer than ones around here.
     
    kwforage and bullhaulerswife Thank this.
  7. dairyman

    dairyman <b> Hopper Thread Greeter</b>

    1,223
    926
    Oct 31, 2009
    Ky.,wait'n in line
    0
    I'd be willing to wager it was a farmer that pulled his hand brake on and stopped too fast with it,or forgot to release it and took off. I constantly see them use their hand brakes in line at harvest,and saw one farmer drop a drive-shaft when he took off after forgetting to release his hand brake. I've never understood why they do this,but a bunch of 'em do it,and it makes me scringe every time i see the trailers bounce and stretch the air bags:biggrin_25524:. Probably was just metal fatigue and overweight,but i thought about all the times i've seen them useing the hand brake and thought i'd mentionm it. Reckon it's possible? Bad day either way.
     
    bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
  8. dairyman

    dairyman <b> Hopper Thread Greeter</b>

    1,223
    926
    Oct 31, 2009
    Ky.,wait'n in line
    0
    I agree WH, they are sharp,lot slicker than the outfits around here too.

    How many tons do you guys normally run thru in a good day in good corn,kwforage?
     
    kwforage and bullhaulerswife Thank this.
  9. bullhaulerswife

    bullhaulerswife Forum Leader/Admin Staff Member Administrator

    28,270
    44,358
    Jul 23, 2007
    Midwest
    0
    I never thought about that. Could be. IDK, but like someone else said, it definitely puts a bad day in perspective for the rest of us. :biggrin_25525:

     
    dairyman Thanks this.
  10. kwforage

    kwforage Road Train Member

    1,047
    472
    Jun 3, 2007
    Wisconsin
    0
    Thanks guys. Not all of our trucks are in my sig pic there but they are all mid 90's with a mil or so on the clock. 3406 in every one of them. We try to keep them in the best shape possible, but it's not easy with the pounding they take. I've got a busy winter ahead of me trying to get my "winter maintanence" list done on all my trucks. It's a long one.

    The chopper on the right is the biggest one Deere makes. Has a 19L Cummins in it. It will do about 300 ton/hour in decent corn with good moisture.
     
    dairyman Thanks this.
  11. dairyman

    dairyman <b> Hopper Thread Greeter</b>

    1,223
    926
    Oct 31, 2009
    Ky.,wait'n in line
    0
    300 T/hr! That would only take you 5 hrs. to harvest ALL of my son's crop for the year,i always was curious how much corn the custom harvestors ran thru in a good day.I knew it had to be a lot,but had no idea it was that much,amazing! Are the 2 trailers both dumps,or are they walking floors? I'm guessing ya'll chop a lot of alfalfa too,right? Do you have the deep reduction trannys in most of your trucks?
     
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.