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  • Trailer decking

    When the weather gets a little better I need to redeck my trailer. Any issues with using treated wood? I like this idea because it has a 25 year warranty
    91 fj 80 on 37 Nitto Muds with a 10k winch. Cage and sliders coming soon.

  • #2
    I have used it in the past with no issues.
    One Country, One Flag, One Language...
    LIKE IT OR LEAVE IT!!!

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    • #3
      just remember treated wodd is heavyer that the wood that the factory put on it.. but it will last longer, i deal in trailers ALOT and i use treated to re do them i just space them out about 1 1/2 in. apart so dirt/mud/water/ will fall thro. the seams, i also use a textured paint called SKID KNOT you can buy it in ANY color at lowe's it costs about $22.00 a gallon and will paint both the top and underside of the boards on a 7x 20ft car trailer,this paint has a sandlike texture but is tough as hurculiner an can be put on with a brush or roller.spacing them WILL cut down on the weight some, and still functions well and looks good too..

      just mt 2c worth
      sigpic Sgt Steve S.

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      • #4
        I used treated 2x10s and 12s to redo mine after the factory stuff rotted through.

        To get them into the C channels on each end, we tucked one end in, put three guys on the other, then jacked up the middle.

        When it was bowed enough, we kicked out the jack. We're really lucky nobody lost a leg.

        If I had to do it over, I'd use 2x6s and 8s. They'd flex a lot easier, and supply a lot less death-n-dismemberment potential.

        Robert
        DIRTY DEEDS, DONE DIRT CHEAP
        Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stranger

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        • #5
          We are still talking pine, I put a white oak floor in my 4x8 trailer many years ago and the floor is fine. I went to the saw mill and got scrap board for a dollar each and milled the down. All of the lowboy trailers at work that haul the equipment around on also uses white oak.

          Wood does add quite a bit of weight to a trailer, I used expanded metal for the floor on my flatbed that I haul my Ranger on.

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          • #6
            I go to a saw mill outside of oxford ohio for oak and have had great success! The wood is not as slick as treated pine is. Douglas fur is another nice and strong wood as well.
            sigpic

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            • #7
              On all of our trailers we use untreated pine 2x8's. Set them out in the sun on a hot day to let them dry real well, then "paint" them with used motor oil. The first time usually takes three coats. Then we redo them once a year.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by WrenchMonkey View Post
                I used treated 2x10s and 12s to redo mine after the factory stuff rotted through.

                To get them into the C channels on each end, we tucked one end in, put three guys on the other, then jacked up the middle.

                When it was bowed enough, we kicked out the jack. We're really lucky nobody lost a leg.

                If I had to do it over, I'd use 2x6s and 8s. They'd flex a lot easier, and supply a lot less death-n-dismemberment potential.

                Robert
                On my father's I just cut off a top lip big enough to get an end of one board through, then slid all the other boards over once inserted & then tacked that lip back on. Seemed like the easiest way to get the wood in there. My own trailer has a metal deck.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by jfiscus View Post
                  On my father's I just cut off a top lip big enough to get an end of one board through, then slid all the other boards over once inserted & then tacked that lip back on. Seemed like the easiest way to get the wood in there. My own trailer has a metal deck.
                  Yep, that'd be the safer way to do it...

                  Where were you with the good ideas when we needed em?

                  Robert
                  DIRTY DEEDS, DONE DIRT CHEAP
                  Whatever doesn't kill you makes you stranger

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by 94Dodge Truggy View Post
                    I go to a saw mill outside of oxford ohio for oak and have had great success! The wood is not as slick as treated pine is. Douglas fur is another nice and strong wood as well.
                    Do you have an address for that sawmill????

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                    • #11
                      Originally posted by GPER View Post
                      Do you have an address for that sawmill????
                      I will ask my farmer friend this weekend. It is past college corner and state line road in indiana.
                      sigpic

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                      • #12
                        are you talking about carter lumber?

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by fordman00 View Post
                          are you talking about carter lumber?
                          No this is a small farm that has a sawmill in a barn operation. Joes lumber.
                          sigpic

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