Stretching frames on Trucks? What is the purpose?

Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Flat Earth Trucker, Jul 26, 2023.

  1. Lonesome

    Lonesome Mr. Sarcasm

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    YEAH!!!Lets see ya do that with a stretch frame.....;)
     
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  3. Big Road Skateboard

    Big Road Skateboard Road Train Member

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    If trucks were ladies, which one you wanna spin around the dance floor? swift-main.jpg tumblr_nrz1svm2Ke1thrmx5o1_1280.jpg
     
  4. Numb

    Numb Crusty Curmudgeon

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    forgot to add some old age bashing in with your weight and east coast hate. o_O

    are you one of those effeminate, shaved body, body builder types?? :rolleyes:
     
    Oxbow Thanks this.
  5. SmallPackage

    SmallPackage Road Train Member

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    95% of vintage iron out there is spliced. Most started out as 215” wb’s and got stretched as length laws allowed. Others got spliced because they were spring ride and were converted to air. Might as will add some inches while your at it.
     
  6. Tropsnart

    Tropsnart Road Train Member

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    Screenshot_20230726_181330_Chrome.jpg

    I get bent out of shape when I see stretched out trailers. They just take too long to pass in my governed plastic aero mega fuel island jammer!
     
  7. TJB15

    TJB15 Light Load Member

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    Last time I saw it was in center point. Pretty sure it lives in Iowa now. Can't hate on project 350.
     
  8. wore out

    wore out Numbered Classic

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    CHASIN THE DEVIL'S HERD
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    Not all are on new rails. I’ve went from 255 to 315 on several for other folks. There is a science to it. It can be over complicated or over simplified both having negative effects.

    For those afraid of the splice or the weld spend some honest time in open minded research. Properly done a welded frame rail is every bit as sturdy as one piece. We are not talking about sewing a rail up with a 110 volt harbor freight machine and flux core wire with unprepared joints. Low hydrogen in the hands of a skilled welder that can weld anything from the crack of dawn to a broken heart, egg shells to spider webs you won’t ever know A single frame rail can and will flex and twist.

    Can also crack over time. Frames break in high load areas from fatigue and corrosion. They bend in a wreck. Finding a frame that just gives up without a cause such as Blount force trauma or corrosion combined with modifications made by hacks is where you’re gonna see frame damage.
     
    ‘Olhand, Feedman, pete781693 and 8 others Thank this.
  9. Sons Hero

    Sons Hero Road Train Member

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    "wore out, post: 12508680- did you cut the frames you stretched straight from top to bottom, or did you cut them on a 45* angle?
     
  10. exhausted379

    exhausted379 Road Train Member

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    Very well put, and I couldn't agree more.
     
  11. Big Road Skateboard

    Big Road Skateboard Road Train Member

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    Not @wore out, but i like the cuts angled down from the front back. Degrees depends. I like to center the cut in the middle of a crossmember. So draw a line, about 1" from the back of the top crossmember bolt in front, to 1" in front of the bottom bolt in the rear of the crossmember.

    I like to cut angles opposing the frame cuts on the glove.
     
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