Here's a clever way to haul your forklift:
http://www.truckpaper.com/listingsde...x?OHID=1899711
Here's a clever way to haul your forklift:
http://www.truckpaper.com/listingsde...x?OHID=1899711
I am holding on to the hope I have inside... Kutless
That does look smart
wonder if it would bottom out while turning in and out of off road approaches?
Ian Steppler >> Canadian Beekeeper
www.stepplerfarms.com
If you have enough momentum would it matter? lol
I am holding on to the hope I have inside... Kutless
As someone who moves bugs on a near nightly basis.....I'm gonna save all you newer folks lots of money here. (PM me for an address to send my $100.00 consultation fee)
"Run from this mess like you're entered in the Special Olympics"![]()
Could always raise it some and lengthen the ramps if that were the case... Anyone heard of this being done with a smaller sized flatbed to draw behind a 3/4/550? I'm guessing not having tongue weight on the trailer would become an issue at that point though.
That's what she said
I didn't see the headboard and forks. Where do they go?
Mark Berninghausen
www.uucantonny.org, "Support Our Troops" Quit Complaining and Fix It
I guess not everyone has full loads. What is that 1500 to 2000 pounds of bees you cannot move for being overweight?
americasbeekeeper.com
beekeeper@americasbeekeeper.com
Not really a problem when moving bees from farm to farm. Besides the machine is necessary.
I am holding on to the hope I have inside... Kutless
Here is a better way to carry a forklift, in the middle of the load area.
http://northstarrg.com/trailers.html
The forklift rides transversely in the depressed center area, and the forklift weight is mostly on the tractor drive tires.
I have seen a scrap paper company in the Seattle area utilizing these trailer to pick up large bales of paper (corrugated, generally) from customers.
Graham
USDA Zone 7a - elevation 1400 ft
Oooooooo I like it!!!!
Kind of interesting but perhaps a second bulkhead might be a good thing. I could see hives shifting ahead and sliding into your machine.
"Ve are too soon olt und too late schmart."- A nameless German philosopher
I don't have a bulkhead on my trailer now.
bulkheads is for people that can't drive. heck where I comes from they have trailers with no wheels. course all you city slickers would just call them sleds. Yu all is sissies.
Why when I was a yungin. we would toss a hive over each shoulder a hoof it 5 mile uphill in both directions through snow drifts up to our eye brows in heat so fierce it would melt lead. Now all you young bucks with your panties all in a twist. Oh my is my ramp long enough???
Think you got it tough? Heh you don't know bout tough til your half way through lunch thinkin that toast seems awful soft until you realized you was eatin shoe leather.
chew nails my eye. I eat steel and fart nails boy.
Heck you ain't done a thing until you trained the bees to pick the hive up and move it theyselves.
Sease your whinnin and start packin. If you lifted hives half as well as you cry about it it'd be done already.
Man do I remember that last one said a lot.
Conversation brought back flash memories of my grandfather.
All work and no play makes a happy bee.
Migratory Beekeeping has been going on for a long time. Your idea is not a new one.....I have seen it implemented a number of times years back. The last one I saw was about 15 years ago, a Texas Commercial had one mounted behind the cab of his "semi" (independent of the trailer). I don't remember his name but I've seen his trucks since and he no longer uses that system. The equipment or location of the equipment itself is not the problem......rather the concept. The negatives, other then very limited situations, are overwhelmingly against this concept.
1)Weight: Just picking a number of 60 lbs per hive.....a S185 Bobcat (as pictured) weighs 6220 lbs alone resulting in a loss of 104 hives per load not counting the additional weight of the "contraption". A Hummerbee....4860 lbs or 81 hives and a 610 Bobcat.....3810 lbs or 64 hives. At todays transportation costs, these alone are serious numbers.
2)Reality: To honestly justify the ownership of a "semi" trailer.....a beek would, by necessity, need to be running a serious number of hives. Ownership of a "semi" trailer means you must also own (or rent) a tractor.....more problems and expense. Most of even the largest commercials do not own 'tractor/trailer' rigs......they hire them when needed....ownership simply doesn't pencil out in most cases. If you run that many hives...you've already got smaller trucks/trailers and probably employees...why not just use them and save the bed space for hives?
If you've already got this.....use it, but I'd sure have an eye on improving costs, efficiency and utility and I can't picture a scenario where this concept accomplishes that.
If you keep your eyes open in almonds you will see all kinds of different ways to get the job done.
Moving bees out of holding yards and into orchards takes some creativity if you ever want to get back home and get some sleep.
A buddy of mine has been running the pictured trailer(s) around just south of Chico for years and years and years, helping beekeepers place hives.
Now I know what you are going to say, so save your breath; he has a CDL for doubles!
![]()
I have exactly ONE hive more than you.
That makes my opinion beyond question.
Yep...and "most" will be medium duty flatbeds with an equipment trailer.
Harry, I had a set up like that once for a VERY short period of time......I have a defective gene that doesn't allow me to back that thing up more then a couple of feet. Anything more.....each piece of equipment heads off in a different direction![]()
I run a one ton chev duramax with 9 ft bed 48 col infront of a 20 foot equipt trailer with another 48 col on front of trailer with a little old case skid loader which weights about 2200 lbs.I put a 20 hp honda engine on it. This lets me move 96 at a time .Looks funny but works for me.Been running this waysince 92 except I was using 94 dodge for a while I usualy load one pallet at a time run only 2 high.
Ever run over weight?
Mark Berninghausen
www.uucantonny.org, "Support Our Troops" Quit Complaining and Fix It
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