Ram 3500 vs 4500
Discussion in 'Expediter and Hot Shot Trucking Forum' started by Tonytruck98, Dec 28, 2021.
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AModelCat, Flint1, 24kHotshot and 1 other person Thank this.
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Friend of mine has this truck for sale in Oklahoma
24kHotshot and singlescrewshaker Thank this. -
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Hulld Thanks this.
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Itsbrokeagain Thanks this.
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I was lucky enough to also own a repair shop so all the repairs were done in house but mainly at the road side lol.
It didn’t take me long to realize that a heavier truck meant for hauling was a much better option.
My Freightliner single axel series 60 sleeper runs about 3600 miles a week day in and day out with out issue during my seasonal trucking gig.
Since then there have been two other local guys who got in to hauling in my area who ask my advice and I told them of my experience with a 3500 and why not to do it.
There response was “well you started with a 3500” ?
So of course they didn’t listen and went with a 3500.
Well it wasn’t long before I received a desperate call from each one of them on two separate occasions looking for rescue help out on the highway.
So I fired up the old series 60 and went out on the road loaded there 3500 on their own trailer and brought the whole mess home for them.
I can only imagine how bad they suffered riding home in my Freightliner listening to the I told you so.
And by the way one now runs a single axel Freightliner and the other runs a single axel Volvo.24kHotshot Thanks this. -
Depends entirely what the business model is and the truck needs to haul. 26k and under hotshotting and RV hauling a 3500 is fine and lots of them get run 500-600k without much trouble. They're easier to de-commission and sell off as regular passenger vehicles with the 14,000 GVWR. Heavy hotshot or hauling 3 cars or more a two axle class 7 or 8 is a better idea. 4500/5500 series trucks you might as well just skip right over unless maybe you're trying to put a driver in the seat that doesn't know how to drive a big truck or some other special reason like needing 4wd. Those are typically just vocational straight jobs driven around town by workers who aren't "truck drivers" per se, who need a higher weight capacity for their equipment but aren't expected to know how to drive a big truck.
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Would it be worth my while to start with a 3500 retire it early to use for personal use? I’ll be needing a big truck anyway in the future, and I’m maybe even thinking about doing some snow plow work with said retired vehicle. How viable would it be to start small then grow if I’d like to?
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So are you saying you can run it on personal insurance? Or just insure it personally until you get the business running?
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