bigblue12v
ArboristSite Operative
No I'm not using it for logging but in my quest to make firewood more efficient and easier on me, I have to haul my wood in to my property as I am not blessed with acreage of timber to harvest. My one ton has a steel flatbed and I am racking my brain for a simple and cost effective way to easily load logs onto it. A truck bed hoist, a very large heavy duty one, would work but it gets kind of complex to motorize or otherwise have reliable safe control over it to keep the load from swinging around and smashing something. Is anyone familiar with a burial vault truck? The local vault company has a few one ton trucks that have a bed like pictured. A hoist on a rail that runs lengthways with the truck allows you to roll the hoist out past the back of the truck bed, lift the (log in my case), spin it 90* if needed, and push it toward the front of the truck until log is situated where you want it, then lower it. The design is solid and simple, the uprights for its frame would act as log racks. I simply need to figure out how big of a winch I need to use for this. Most 12V winches are rated for flat ground pulling not vertical lifting. I want one plenty safe but not any bulkier than necessary as I have a maximum height to be concerned with in order for truck to fit into my shop as needed, and other reasons. So I don't want a huge 10,000# winch taking up a lot of my available height. Would a 4" H beam be strong enough as a rail? It would be extended roughly 4' past the rear most vertical supports.