|
 Kansas | I have a hair brained idear I want to run by everyone. I know this could tend to get costly but I have a feeling over time this will pay for itself.
I bought a new Titan this summer to replace the 95 circle D I had. Like the Circle D, they made a feeble attempt to spray a very thin coating of car underbody coating on the inside all the way around about 3 to 4 feet up from the bottom.
It's gonna be a joke just like the circle d's was. It gets rubbed off, kicked off, scraped off. It won't last, especially at the bottom, where it needs to be the toughest to deal with manure that doesn't get get removed in timely fashions.
so, basically, it is a joke for the purpose it's supposed to serve in my opinion.
Then, got to thinking about a buddy I have that has one of those clone rhino linings done to the inside of his pickup box. I don't think you could scrape that stuff of with a chisel and hammer as tough as it is. Won't peel off, won't scrape off.
What do you think about using something similar to the rhino liner products and doing that to the inside of a stock trailer to prevent the 10-12 year rusting that always starts at the bottoms of the steel trailers? I'm not necessarily saying go up 4 foot from the bottom like the undercoating spray is currently but the deepest that the poo is/has/will ever be from lax times of cleaning it out. Say foot and half to two feet up from bottom?
No.....I will not buy aluminum.
| |
|