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12-01-2003, 09:23 PM | #1 |
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wood bed weight
Hey guys,
Does anyone have an idea how much the wood and the metal strips weigh for a short fleet bed? Not the whole bed, just the wooden floor and the metal strips that go between the boards. The reason that I'm asking is that the Yard store here in Wichita currently has a few 6'X12' sheets of 3/16 aluminum treadplate for sale, and I was wondering what the weight difference would be if I used treadplate for a bed floor.
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12-01-2003, 11:09 PM | #2 |
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it would be a lot lighter i can tell you that much
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12-01-2003, 11:12 PM | #3 |
Robert Olson Transport
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well a 1X6X8 is prolly about seven pounds or so?
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12-01-2003, 11:15 PM | #4 |
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I did the math, and the treadplate would weigh about 103 lbs (give or take a couple of pounds) I'm guessing that the wood bed would weigh about 50 pounds. does this sound right?
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12-02-2003, 12:47 AM | #5 |
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If you can wait a day or so I can pull my bathroom scale out and weigh them for you. I have all mine stacked up against the wall and it wouldn't take too much to weigh them for you. I'm thinking that that weigh more than the aluminum though.
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12-02-2003, 07:49 PM | #6 |
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Vince M,
I would appreciate that if it's not too much trouble. They want 300 bucks for a sheet of treadplate that's 6 feet by 12 feet and I have to buy the whole thing (they won't shear it and sell me just a piece), so I haven't decided if I can justify the cost or not. What do you guys think? The piece that'll be left over will be 6 feet by 5 1/2 feet. Can anyone think of a use for a piece of scrap that big?
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12-02-2003, 08:11 PM | #7 |
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The wood (if hardwood) weighs at least 100 lb with the strips.
You have to watch aluminum and steel there is serious corosing that happens over time. Make sure that you use a rubber gasket between the metal and aluminum. I would personaly use the original wood. But it's your truck and you have to do what you like. Later Mario
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12-02-2003, 11:07 PM | #8 |
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Mario hit it right on the head. Weight of all the wood and the metal runners comes in at 101 pounds on the uncalibrated bathroom scale. Less than I thought. Wonder what a steel bed weighs.
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12-03-2003, 03:00 PM | #9 |
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Thanks for the input guys.
Regarding the steel bed, my aircraft reference handbook lists aluminum as weighing .1 lb per cubic inch, which is how I came up with 100 lbs for a 3/16" thick aluminum floor 77 inches by 72 inches. If I could ever find a piece of 1/8" aluminum that was big enough, it would only weigh about 60 lbs. Steel comes in at .26 lb per cubic inch, so it would be pretty easy to figure out if you knew the thickness of a steel floor. Just as a swag, I'd guess that the steel would weigh in at about 50 pounds.
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