I do not have a link but Lenco is a brand. I bought all the components at Airgas, a welding supply house if you didn’t know. 00 was the cable gage I used. One thing to keep in mind is that the cables are hot at the rear end of the truck so I made a pvc cover to keep them clean and not exposed.Got a link to those connectors? I’ve been thinking of running a line to the back of my Ram and using Anderson connectors on the end.
When I got my Load Trail dump trailer in May 2016, I didn’t charge it for almost a year. The truck kept it charged until the battery began to weaken. Same with my Big Tex. I didn’t charge it for two years. Toward the end of that battery’s life, I had to charge it every night. And at the end, two big loads a day drained it completely. I dumped a load with my newest Big Tex last week and after dumping a load, it still had over 90% battery.
Yeah, I considered a cut-off switch at the battery so that the cable is not hot all the time. At least a cut-off somewhere beneath the bed of the truck, short of the end.I do not have a link but Lenco is a brand. I bought all the components at Airgas, a welding supply house if you didn’t know. 00 was the cable gage I used. One thing to keep in mind is that the cables are hot at the rear end of the truck so I made a pvc cover to keep them clean and not exposed.
I have a set that I peeled apart for my trailer, 40ft long or so, grounds through the hitch so I only need the positive leadI would keep 2 sets of jumper cables handy to reach from the truck battery to the trailer if it died. And of course the battery should be charged every night.
thats how mines been, 2 years or so on this battery and the only time it's died in the past was dumping a really heavy load and popping the charge fuse, then dumping 3 or 4 more loads in a day, was dumping fine last week till I let go of the button for half a second to swap hands half way up and it stopped, wasn't more than maybe 4000 pounds in the trailer at the timeWhen I got my Load Trail dump trailer in May 2016, I didn’t charge it for almost a year. The truck kept it charged until the battery began to weaken. Same with my Big Tex. I didn’t charge it for two years. Toward the end of that battery’s life, I had to charge it every night. And at the end, two big loads a day drained it completely. I dumped a load with my newest Big Tex last week and after dumping a load, it still had over 90% battery.
I've considered it, but I'm not the only person that pulls this trailer, so I can't do anything that stops a bone stock truck from reliably using it, and for it to only fail once in 2 years is more than reliable enough for me, most places I dump have equipment to help unload at no charge if we need anywaysBetter to run a set of heavy welding leeds from your trucks battery under your truck with twist lock connectors to the hydro pump on the dump. Never a dead battery plus eliminating a battery all together. Works amazingly well.
they aren't my trucks, people rent my trailer on occasionRun cables on all the trucks that tow it.
its usually charged!Just like I can't trust the rental stump grinder teeth to be sharp, I wouldn't trust the rental trailer to be charged.
I've had "good" customers like that. By good I mean multiple repeat jobs. But....yup, one bid that aint the lowball and....ghosted.you can have a good thing going, work for the same guy for years, and get ghosted the minute someone else does one job for $100 cheaper,
I bid a job for a neighbor, 13ft diameter oak stump with exposed roots, measured out to around a 52ft circumference to grind, with concrete in it, he wanted it to look like it was never there (top broke off in a storm, left a 30ft tall spar)I've had "good" customers like that. By good I mean multiple repeat jobs. But....yup, one bid that aint the lowball and....ghosted.
add felt to the bottom to avoid marking up the floor, and I can totally see this being a really cool shelf actually!I've got a nice walnut log I'm going to slab up. Maybe get some cinder blocks. Do it up right!