lisa_lou
Well-Known Member
What is the biggest payload you can get from a 3.5 lorry? I have seen loads with 1200kg payload but i need about 1400kg. Really cant afford to take a bigger license test. Is it possible to get a 1.4 payload at all??
What is the biggest payload you can get from a 3.5 lorry? I have seen loads with 1200kg payload but i need about 1400kg. Really cant afford to take a bigger license test. Is it possible to get a 1.4 payload at all??
2 x 15.2 lightweight thoroughbreds (around 1100kg bodyweight combined) Everyone says it cant be done but have found as website (as suggested above) that do payloads of 1400kg. Thank you paint me proud!!
And selling Burgers at your local Car Boot Sale.![]()
And hope you stay within the law with weight limits and dont compromise other road users in the process.![]()
Thats good.
Because i've always said if i'm in an accident involving a burger van containing horses, then i'd want a full insurance investigation to whether the vehicle was even roadworthy I.E weight etc.
IMO these vehicles are death traps and shouldn't be allowed on the highway
If I was involved in an accident with someone in a 7.5t lorry I'd want to know that they were actually capable of driving it given that most of them only do it on 'granny rights' and probably really aren't!
My instructor told me a client of her had bought a fantastic 7.5t box to transport her two competition horses in but didnt check the unladen weight before hand.
Lo and behold when they got it home and had it on a weigh bridge it would only legally carry one horse! Yet how many people would just buy it and load it up with 2 or 3 horses without checking - dead traps, that should be allowed on the road!
You will probably find most 3.5t box owners are more aware of their carrying limits than larger box owners, and thus more likely to be operating within the law.
If I was involved in an accident with someone in a 7.5t lorry I'd want to know that they were actually capable of driving it given that most of them only do it on 'granny rights' and probably really aren't!
Given most people who passed their test after 1997 are far more experienced on the roads, I'm 49 not a granny ( do you have to be to drive a 7.5 ton lorry? )and never had an accident in my life; drive a 7.5ton box which I must say is a darn sight easier to drive than some 4 x 4's.
Plus the fact that most accidents are caused/happen to under 25's?!!