Straps on rub rail or underneath (trailer permitting)?

Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by staceydude, Dec 3, 2020.

  1. D.Tibbitt

    D.Tibbitt Road Train Member

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    I had a flag i think thats why he pulled me over.. I always do it out of habit anything overhanging. Been rearended this year already in california . Dont need the liability some dumb ### lawyer saying it shouldve been flagged when his deceased client decapitates himself on the overhang
     
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  3. HillbillyDeluxeTruck

    HillbillyDeluxeTruck Road Train Member

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    Do yall know why it's called a rub rail?

    Because its meant to be used to protect the straps. NOT to hook the straps to. I don't care what anyone says, if a trailer goes over with a load that has any kind of weight to it, that rub rail WILL rip off the trailer and the load will come off the trailer. Those rails are NOT designed to hold 40+ thousand lbs of whatever is on your trailer.

    Hook your strap to the underside of the trailer. Strap your load for the wreck, not the ride.
     
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  4. D.Tibbitt

    D.Tibbitt Road Train Member

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    Some rub rails are rated for securement . Some trailers have no option other than hook to rub rail.
     
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  5. Dave1837

    Dave1837 Road Train Member

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    Depends on the trailer, I call the rub rail a tarp bar. Some or most trailers say that the tarp bar is NOT for load securement. I never use it, I personally think it screams western express. If the trailer doesn't have hooks underneath I use J-hooks
     
  6. Espressolane

    Espressolane Road Train Member

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    Have Fontaine trailers with the machined rails. They are rated for securement. It is really the only choice die to the location of the winch tracks.
     
  7. kylefitzy

    kylefitzy Road Train Member

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    If your trailer goes over, the rubrail is probably the Least of your concerns. “Don’t use the rubrail, use the part of the trailer that the rubrail is welded to 100 plus times”

    Doesn’t make much sense to me.
     
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  8. HillbillyDeluxeTruck

    HillbillyDeluxeTruck Road Train Member

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    It sure does matter. Wrapped around a thin flat piece of aluminum or steel that has a bunch of single pass welds or hooked to a solid part of the trailer where the only failure point is the strap?
     
  9. kylefitzy

    kylefitzy Road Train Member

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    How do you think the sides of the trailer are attached to the crossmembers? 6 pass fillet welds? Or are you saying to run your straps all the way to the frame?
     
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  10. AKDoug

    AKDoug Medium Load Member

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    Do your winches ride in a sliding track? What's it rated for? About the same as any trailer with a load rated rub rail.
     
    Nostalgic, jamespmack and stwik Thank this.
  11. booley

    booley Road Train Member

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    I wish you guys wouldn’t badmouth the DOT officers...my girlfriend is married to one ;);)
     
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