January-February 2008

Transfer Trailers: Being Good Neighbors

Like the late comedian Rodney Dangerfield, transfer trailers “don’t get no respect.”

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By George Leposky

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On a live-floor trailer, rubber seals between the aluminum floor slats also wear over time. “They have a pretty long life based on usage,” says Limback at Manac Trailers. “We offer a one-year warranty, but it will last for three or more years before it needs rebuilding. That’s where maintenance comes in.”

Limback warns against dropping large, heavy objects on a live floor built for transfer operation. “After Hurricane Katrina, a lot of transient transfer-trailer operators went down to the Gulf Coast and put their trailers into demolition hauling. They wore terribly due to overloading when the weight restrictions were lifted for a time and because of impact damage—dropping large articles like a refrigerator or an engine block that you wouldn’t load at a transfer station.”

The products of SmithCo Manufacturing Inc. of Le Mars, IA, eliminate these seal problems. “We sell side-dump trailers,” says Rick Lawrence, national sales manager. “They’re watertight. They have no tailgate. The tub is a completely welded structure that is tipped up and sideways to deposit the payload to the side of the trailer. You don’t have leakage worries on the highway, and you don’t have a tailgate to worry about.”

Good Housekeeping
Transfer trailers by nature aren’t pretty, but keeping them free of grime and grunge can make them less unsightly. “The important thing for appearance is a little soap and water,” Limback says. “How often these trailers are pressure-washed varies greatly.”

Limback says smooth-side trailers are easier to clean than those with sheet-and-post construction. “The smooth-side has no rail at the bottom of the panels where liquid debris could accumulate, and it washes quicker. You don’t have to wash every post individually.

“Also, a smooth-side has a shinier appearance. Instead of a rolled sheet, it’s a hollow-core, extruded-aluminum panel that looks seamless from the outside and is tack-welded together on the inside. The smooth-side is 3% to 5% more expensive, but the appearance is better. Because the core is hollow, when you ding the material on the inside, you can’t see it from the outside. A sheet-and-post trailer shows battle scars.”

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Keppel concedes that smooth-side trailers are easier to keep clean. But “I’ve seen operations that have sprayers for sheet-and-post trailers that seem to work just fine,” he says. “It’s a function of how sanitary your transfer station is.”

Keppel says the cleanliness and safety of any transfer-trailer operation “is a coordination between the trailer manufacturer and its products and the operators using the equipment for what it was designed for. To have a safe, reliable, cost-effective operation requires good-quality equipment and knowledgeable operators. Operational quality comes down from the highest part of management to the lowest guy cleaning up the shop. It’s a big team effort.”

Author's Bio: George Leposky is a science and technology writer based in Miami, FL.

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