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[email protected] August 28th 06 02:21 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


The Reverend Natural Light August 28th 06 02:45 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
The slightest bend and the tailgate will never close right again. How
much is that worth to you? I'd rent a trailer or move it in 2 or more
trips.

-rev


wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?



[email protected] August 28th 06 02:55 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
Just buy 4x8 or 4x10 sheets. 4x12 sheets are such a pain to work with
anyway, that I'd much rather mud an extra joint or two and use the
4x10's


[email protected] August 28th 06 02:57 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
Just buy 4x8 or 4x10 sheets. 4x12 sheets are such a pain to work with
anyway, that I'd much rather mud an extra joint or two and use the
4x10's


Jack August 28th 06 03:05 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


How about laying about 3 planks(2x4x6-8-10) in the bed extend them
out the two feet and lay the drywall sheets on them that way sheets are
supported the full 12 feet.
Jack


dpb August 28th 06 03:12 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


About--a little over, methinks, but not much.

Doable if short distance and can be real careful on the road, but the
better way would be to use several tubah-X's (and optionally a piece of
ply on top for a nice smooth surface) to make a temporary bed extender
so the ends are supported rather than hanging free. It's well within
the load range of a full-size pu (even if it is a Ford :) ) and the
amount of load on the tailgate if supported as above isn't excessive as
long as you don't go pounding it up and down.

As someone else noted, 12-footers are a real pita to handle as they're
so long and flexible it takes some real careful handling to keep them
from breaking in the middle even just getting them onto a lift.
Overhead w/o a lift is absolutely impossible (no cobbled-up 't-bracket'
is going to be adequate as you can get by w/ on 8- or even w/ care,
10-ft). Even going on a wall you have to be very careful when cutting
to not let the middle be unsupported and let it tilt towards level too
far while you and a buddy are holding the ends or snap!!!


Phisherman August 28th 06 04:45 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
On 28 Aug 2006 07:05:55 -0700, "Jack" wrote:


wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


How about laying about 3 planks(2x4x6-8-10) in the bed extend them
out the two feet and lay the drywall sheets on them that way sheets are
supported the full 12 feet.
Jack



That's the way I'd do it, even support.

August 28th 06 05:48 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
In article . com,
wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


Short distance, smooth road, low speed, no problem.

Longer distance, bumpy roads, high speed, buy a few 2X4s to put under
the DW. Don't forget to rig something to keep them from sliding out
the back. DAMHIKT.
--

Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland



Robert Allison August 28th 06 09:06 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
wrote:
In article . com,
wrote:

I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?



Short distance, smooth road, low speed, no problem.

Longer distance, bumpy roads, high speed, buy a few 2X4s to put under
the DW. Don't forget to rig something to keep them from sliding out
the back. DAMHIKT.


My thoughts exactly. I would worry more about them sliding
out the back than anything else. Many, many years ago, I
drove out from under 30 sheets, which landed in the middle of
a busy intersection. Only broke the corner of the bottom two
sheets, and landed as if they had been stacked there. I
blocked traffic in both directions while I reloaded them into
the truck (and NOONE stopped to help). Now I tie them in even
if I am just going across the street.

--
Robert Allison
Rimshot, Inc.
Georgetown, TX

Edwin Pawlowski August 28th 06 09:16 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

"Robert Allison" wrote in message
I reloaded them into the truck (and NOONE stopped to help). Now I tie
them in even if I am just going across the street.


Was that you? Next time wave and I'll stop. Honest.



EXT August 28th 06 09:28 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
Don't forget to tie the sheets to the truck as they have a habit of sliding
out the back onto the road when you pull away at a traffic light, especially
with an overhang. Tie them to the top of the front of the bed and around
down under onto the chassis a couple of times to keep all movement
contained.

"Phisherman" wrote in message
...
On 28 Aug 2006 07:05:55 -0700, "Jack" wrote:


wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?


How about laying about 3 planks(2x4x6-8-10) in the bed extend them
out the two feet and lay the drywall sheets on them that way sheets are
supported the full 12 feet.
Jack



That's the way I'd do it, even support.




George E. Cawthon August 28th 06 10:32 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?

There is no problem, assuming that you have a real
150 and not a show dog like the F150 Harley
Davidson. The 2 foot over hang won't have any
negative effect on the drywall or the tailgate.

Mike Dobony August 29th 06 02:09 AM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

"The Reverend Natural Light" wrote in message
oups.com...
The slightest bend and the tailgate will never close right again. How
much is that worth to you? I'd rent a trailer or move it in 2 or more
trips.

-rev


???????????????? NEVER had a problem with using the tailgate to support
drywall. Of course they were all Chevy's, not Fords.


wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?





Ivan Vegvary August 29th 06 06:41 AM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

Don't forget to rig something to keep them from sliding out
the back. DAMHIKT.


Nowadays if you slide a small sheet along the highway the hazmat people will
probably have to come out and close the roadway. Close it at least long
enough so they can analyze the offending item. Crazy!!

Ivan Vegvary



Harry K August 29th 06 02:30 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 

George E. Cawthon wrote:
wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?

There is no problem, assuming that you have a real
150 and not a show dog like the F150 Harley
Davidson. The 2 foot over hang won't have any
negative effect on the drywall or the tailgate.


I suppose you could do it that way if you ignore the chance of the last
2 feet of the bottom sheet(s) snapping off when you hit a bump. If not
using 2 bys or boards under the load, at least strap the overhang
together.

Harry K


George E. Cawthon August 29th 06 08:19 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
Harry K wrote:
George E. Cawthon wrote:
wrote:
I need to get 10 sheets of 4x12 1/2" drywall home. I have an F150 full
bed pickup truck. With the tailgate down, I would have 10ft of
carrying surface. How bad it is to leave 2ft of the drywall (10
sheets) hanging out the back? Also, I think a sheet would weigh about
80lbs...is that right?

There is no problem, assuming that you have a real
150 and not a show dog like the F150 Harley
Davidson. The 2 foot over hang won't have any
negative effect on the drywall or the tailgate.


I suppose you could do it that way if you ignore the chance of the last
2 feet of the bottom sheet(s) snapping off when you hit a bump. If not
using 2 bys or boards under the load, at least strap the overhang
together.

Harry K


Yeah! I assumed that the truck had springs and
shocks and the driver would be careful and avoid
hitting big bumps. It would take a hell of a bump
to snap the last two feet off. But if one were
worried about that, the best way would be to put
five foot long' 2x4s crosswise to the sheet, one
under and one over, to the sheets and located 1'
past the open tailgate, and bind the ends together
with rope on each end. Ten sheets bound together
would never snap unless one hit a bump that would
raise the whole load up 2-3 feet above the pickup
bed, but one would have more serious problems than
snapping the ends of the sheets off. Cheers.

Joe January 28th 17 04:14 PM

4x12 drywall in a pickup truck?
 
replying to EXT, Joe wrote:
Haha happened to me in the middle of an intersection luckily only 6 sheets and
another helper in the truck. Back loaded in 6 minutes but broke 2 panels.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...ck-141232-.htm




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