It takes less time to throw a few straps than it does to try and explain why you didn't if things go wrong.
You could lose everything you own, including your freedom, or you can tie down a load.
Only an idiot or a rank greenhorn can't see the obvious choice.
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Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by MACK E-6, Dec 11, 2017.
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The Westerns had sides that rolled up to the top instead of front to back, and they had a tarp on the top. They were made for hauling chips one way and lumber back. When you closed the sides you had to use some of the winches to secure the bottom edge. Not sure what the load limit was, but they’d hold chips in.
Last edited: Feb 3, 2025
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Suppose a pallet of freight tipped over against the curtain. Even if the curtain did contain the load (which maybe it would for all I know), you would now be driving down the road with the side of your trailer bulging out. Kind of a red flag.
Also, it would present all kinds of problems when the time comes to open the curtain for unloading.CAXPT, cke, broke down plumber and 2 others Thank this. -
Where a regular curtain is tightened front to back and the bottom buckles are hooked to keep it from flapping around, load bearing sides have straps that go through a winch and are cranked down to hold the bottom tight. That’s why there are so many winches on both sides of the trailer. The guys that pulled the ones Cliff had would mark the winches that were used for the curtain so they knew which ones could be used for the lumber. Their straps also had no hooks because of the winches on both sides.broke down plumber, CAXPT, cke and 8 others Thank this. -
You would be surprised how strong the sides are. The technology is amazing. They look flimsy but aren't. When I was doing recovery we had synthetic cables and rigging that was insane. As long as you kept the Kevlar sheathing in place and protected it from chafing it would lift rail cars. Chemists and engineers really are heroes. What they do behind the scenes touches our lives daily.
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