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- Newsgroups: misc.rural
- Path: sparky!uunet!mercury.hsi.com!mlfarm!rosie!ron
- From: ron@mlfarm.com (Ronald Florence)
- Subject: Re: Advice needed on farm/general use truck
- In-Reply-To: lovejoy@cantor.math.purdue.edu's message of Thu, 21 Jan 1993 20:25:17 GMT
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.151907.27505@mlfarm.com>
- Sender: news@rosie.mlfarm.com
- Organization: Maple Lawn Farm, Stonington, CT
- References: <C180q6.2FI@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 15:19:07 GMT
- Lines: 30
-
- Victor W. Lovejoy writes:
-
- [...] will a Chevy 1500 be strong enough to haul hay and feed?
- I've heard that in order to haul the 1/2 ton the truck is rated
- for, special coolers and suspension will be needed.
-
- A 1/2 ton truck, like a Chevy 1500, should easily haul a 1/2 ton of
- hay or grain without any special equipment. If you're sure that's all
- you'll be carrying, you can probably get by with a V-6, which will do
- wonders for your gas mileage on commutes. You can carry more than 1/2
- ton in a 1/2 ton truck, but if you're going to haul heavy loads often,
- especially on hilly terrain, you may want multi-ply truck tires, a
- heavy-duty suspension package, a transmission cooler, and even a V-8.
- Overloaded trucks don't handle well, overloaded tires wear fast, and
- transmissions don't take well to overheating.
-
- Every truck is a trade-off. A 1/2 ton pickup is relatively
- economical, and rides more like a car. But fifty bales of packed
- alfalfa hay can weight 2500 pounds, and grain is cheaper if you buy a
- ton at a time. Loads like that, or a bed full of firewood, call for a
- 3/4 ton truck, with heavy tires and suspension, a transmission oil
- cooler, and if you've got any hills around, a big V-8. We routinely
- haul a ton and a half of fertilizer or a ton of sheep in our Chevy
- 2500; we can pull two loaded haywagons up hills. The downside is that
- I should have invested in oil company stocks when we bought the truck:
- the 5.7 V-8 gets no more than 17-18 mpg on the road with no load.
- --
-
- Ronald Florence
- ron@mlfarm.com
-