bttmline, Either that's some very lite-weight dirt, or your truck has some pretty stout springs.
Yep - that's mushroom compost - a lot lighter than dirt!
There is a mushroom factory about 15 miles from the house. They make compost, grow one crop of mushrooms, and then sell the spent compost. There is a conveyor belt coming out of the factory. You just pull up under it and let your truck fill up. It is great stuff for the yard / garden.
Still, it is a decent size load. I had a 1966 1/2 ton shortbed and it was really border line on being too much weight getting a full load. But the 3/4 ton long bed handles it with ease - even with those side boards. The highboy is a heckuva a lot nicer for hauling stuff!
Steve
1971 Ford F-250 4x4 Highboy - Pics 2003 Toyota Tacoma 4x4
kool, is it the kent or kenet mushroom place? i know when I worked at J-M in miami(Miam-Uh)ok, we had containers from them. The more i think they might be the one in pennsylvania.
"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." - Mark Twain
'70 f250 4x4 Crew cab 460/C6 '72 F100 390/C6 9.8 MPG AVG. '89 Mercury Cougar LS Dual Exh. V6 . 18.9 MPG AVG. In Town.
I don't want to give em a heart-attack. That is what would happen if I answered the door in the buff. Heck it almost scares me to death when I step out of the shower and look in the mirror.~Mancar1~
fuelly.com
oh good old old montery i used to package for them around the holidays out of J-M Farms. always assumed they was from monterey, cauliflower.
"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." - Mark Twain
'70 f250 4x4 Crew cab 460/C6 '72 F100 390/C6 9.8 MPG AVG. '89 Mercury Cougar LS Dual Exh. V6 . 18.9 MPG AVG. In Town.
I don't want to give em a heart-attack. That is what would happen if I answered the door in the buff. Heck it almost scares me to death when I step out of the shower and look in the mirror.~Mancar1~
fuelly.com
long story but heres my 71 working. trying to pull over the bronco, it failed. not enough wait in the rear even with the cell and the worn tires. it tried its very best though but what do you expect from it on a dirt road trying to pull a heavy bronco over onto its wheels. that deed requires 4x4.
1971ford wrote:long story but heres my 71 working. trying to pull over the bronco, it failed. not enough wait in the rear even with the cell and the worn tires. it tried its very best though but what do you expect from it on a dirt road trying to pull a heavy bronco over onto its wheels. that deed requires 4x4.
I bet if your tow rope had been about 2 or 3 times longer you could have done it. That close to the Bronco, it looks like the pull was taking the weight off your rear wheels.
Steve
1970 F350 DRW Factory 9' Platform/Stake, 360, T18.
Passed on to new care taker July, 2013
yeah What Flatbed said. Longer rope and a slight runnig tug. but be carefull too much tug and you'll have to do it again from the other side. I beleive that type of recovery out here would run 35 unless it was an accident between two cars and then it would be the police impound fee of 90.
"It is better to keep your mouth shut and appear stupid than to open it and remove all doubt." - Mark Twain
'70 f250 4x4 Crew cab 460/C6 '72 F100 390/C6 9.8 MPG AVG. '89 Mercury Cougar LS Dual Exh. V6 . 18.9 MPG AVG. In Town.
I don't want to give em a heart-attack. That is what would happen if I answered the door in the buff. Heck it almost scares me to death when I step out of the shower and look in the mirror.~Mancar1~
fuelly.com
yep i definately see how a longer tow strap would of helped! It definately seems that when the bronco started to tip up then the tow strap angle would increase even more and pull the wheels right up.
I did give it a few jerks. not big ones by any means because we had it around my axle! (and big jerks are dangerous/parts breaking anyways) but by giving it jerks it lifted the bronco maybe 6 inches from the ground then my tires slipped.
1971ford wrote:yep i definately see how a longer tow strap would of helped! It definately seems that when the bronco started to tip up then the tow strap angle would increase even more and pull the wheels right up.
I did give it a few jerks. not big ones by any means because we had it around my axle! (and big jerks are dangerous/parts breaking anyways) but by giving it jerks it lifted the bronco maybe 6 inches from the ground then my tires slipped.
Oh no Ryan, not the axle!
Dont worry, I once watched a guy wrap a chain around the inside of his dual & pull his Dodge 1 ton out of a ditch. He tied it off to a tree. Then just slowly backed the truck out. As the duals turn, the chain pulls tight & pulls the truck out. It worked, but I was sure something was going to break.
Matt
1971 F-100 Sport Custom - My grandpaws truck
Been in the family since 10/3/'71 (Brand spankin' new)
Mine since 5/7/'94
302 / 3 speed / 3:25's
--Currently undergoing full frame off resto/mod--
i know i know, and i knew someone would question my stupidness on it but i know it wasn't the smartest thing Just remember i barely tugged on the bronco with my truck because of it. There was no where else to put the strap (cut out the frame crossmember and replaced with tube fuel cell crossmembers but didnt want to break those off) and no rear bumper.
I must say, I have done it many times in the past....
Matt
1971 F-100 Sport Custom - My grandpaws truck
Been in the family since 10/3/'71 (Brand spankin' new)
Mine since 5/7/'94
302 / 3 speed / 3:25's
--Currently undergoing full frame off resto/mod--
Two cubic yards of topsoil (If an estimation I read is correct that'll be about three tons) in a '71 F250CS with a 6900lb GVW .
Before
After
You can feel it when trying to take off but man I love every minute of those big Camper Special brakes!
www.advlifestyle.com 1971 Camper Special (390 / C6 / D60) 1970 F250 High Boy (NP435 / Dana 24 / No engine, rusted to hell and back body, project to combine with above.)
1966 Rustang (289 / C4 Project stalled for ages) 1989 Jeep Cherokee (4.0 / Auto / D30 / D44 / 35's) 1996 Jeep Cherokee (4.0 / Auto / D30 / D35)