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Old 06-20-2006, 10:42 PM
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Default How many women drive a flatbed?

I was wondering; how many women drive a flatbed?
If so, what do you think about it?
Is it difficult to learn; or hard to do? (as far as the tarping/straping, ect.)
What about the trailer, is it easier to pull than a van?
Do you like it?
I'm exploring the idea as a possibility; and I would like to
hear a woman's point of veiw.

pronghornracer
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Old 06-21-2006, 10:43 AM
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Old 06-21-2006, 11:51 AM
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I know I'm not a woman, but I have seen a number of women that have been pulling flats by themselves. In most cases, they are running team with their husbands, so the tarping is not so much of an issue.

My wife ran team with me, and she did carry the steel tarps, but when it came to the lumber tarps, each one of them weighed more than she does.
So, if she were to run solo, I don't think she would be pulling flats. But she did enjoy it. Much better backing into a space. She liked the idea of being able to see (many times) the trailer and what is or isn't behind it.
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Old 06-21-2006, 03:59 PM
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I'll admire you if you do it for longer than a year solo. :shock: We did it team for about 6 months when we were still trying to find our niche together out here. That wasn't our niche! :evil:

All it took was one lumber load with wind and rain/sleet. Decided then we had all the fun we could handle.
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Old 06-22-2006, 02:42 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Windwalker
I know I'm not a woman, but I have seen a number of women that have been pulling flats by themselves. In most cases, they are running team with their husbands, so the tarping is not so much of an issue.

My wife ran team with me, and she did carry the steel tarps, but when it came to the lumber tarps, each one of them weighed more than she does.
So, if she were to run solo, I don't think she would be pulling flats. But she did enjoy it. Much better backing into a space. She liked the idea of being able to see (many times) the trailer and what is or isn't behind it.
That's fine, I welcome a man's point of veiw too. I'm about to start school
on Monday, and I'm trying to figure out what I want to do after graduation. Though I am brand new to the trucking industry; to me it
looks like the flatbed would be easier to pull, I guess because it isn't so big and boxy, easier to see around; like your wife said.
As far as work, I don't mind working
hard. As far as strapping and stuff like that, I know nothing about it. I do
know that it is a critical thing to do it correctly, nor do I know how much strength it takes to do it; and I'm only 5'3, if that matters.

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Old 06-22-2006, 04:52 AM
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My wife is 4' 11 3/4". And, she weighs in at a whopping 115 pounds. She had her own way of pulling on the cheater bar, and most of the time, she did get the straps tight. She'd ask me to go behind her and check them, and most of the time, I didn't get them any tighter than she did.

Tarps were the issue for her. It was all she could do to handle the steel tarps which weigh about half of what a lumber tarp is. Many times, the forklift operator will put the tarps up on the load for you, but there are ocassions when you have to get them up to the top of a load of lumber yourself. At times, you may have to put them on top of a low load, only a couple of feet above the bed. Other times, you may have to lift them two feet over your head. Or, you can wrap a rope around it and pull it up, but again, they are not light. If it hooks on the corner of something, you can pull yourself off the load trying to get it up.

On loads of lumber, the units do not always fit together will. There are often spaces between the units when they are loaded. It's fine to go up there and take the twists out of the straps, and make sure they are located where they'll do the most good, but once they are covered with a stretched tarp, the voids disappear. Take my word for it... You'll only step in one once.

There is as much to learn about tarping as there is for securing the load. At times, awkward loads of equipment must be tarped, and all sharp corners must be protected or your tarps will be little more than rags within a hundred miles.

Quite a number of the women that I've seen pulling flats were pulling loads that did not require a tarp. The weight of the tarp may have been the reason for that. Learning to secure your loads and tarping them may take longer than learning to drive in the first place. But, good luck to you.
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Old 06-22-2006, 08:11 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Windwalker
My wife is 4' 11 3/4".
Can't you give her a break and just make it 5' even? :wink:
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Old 06-22-2006, 12:00 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Snake_Ize
Quote:
Originally Posted by Windwalker
My wife is 4' 11 3/4".
Can't you give her a break and just make it 5' even? :wink:

She's the one that's always telling me how tall she is. But, way down deep inside where it really counts, she's AT LEAST 10 FEET TALL.
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Old 06-22-2006, 03:58 PM
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I remembered the first time I pulled a skateboard..I looked in my mirror,and I was like :shock: where'd my trailer go? I was used to seeing the trailer sides. Id rather pull a van or a reefer myself. Im too paranoid to pull a skateboard. Im always thinking that everything is gonna slide off,or a strap is going to break or somethin..
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Old 06-24-2006, 03:24 AM
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I have seen a few women pulling a flat. It seems that a lot of them are with their husbands, but some are solo. You just need to learn to work smart. It can be difficult to tarp for a smaller person, especially if you don't have a lot of body strength. You may consider a covered wagon. That can have it's own set of problems. You will probably want to get a small ladder to keep inside the kit, if that is the way you want to go. Most of the time you can get a fork lift operator to put the tarp on top of the load and trailer. You still have to manuever it on the trailer or side box. :?
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