ShadowsPapa
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Bill
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2019
- Threads
- 247
- Messages
- 40,445
- Reaction score
- 53,880
- Location
- Runnells, Iowa
- Vehicle(s)
- '25 JTMX, '23 JLU 4xe, '82 SX4, '73 Javelin
- Occupation
- Retired auto mechanic, frmr gov't ntwrk security admin
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- 3
- Thread starter
- #1
I'm sure someone has done this and written about it .......... somewhere.
Great day today - my wife was running several embroidery projects and her machine stopped - again, but this time it was screaming and was HOT HOT HOT. So it's dead. A few hours later, I was spraying for bugs and ants as they like to move in as winter sets in, and I check the furnace filter and such every so often anyway - water heater leaking rusty water all over. It's toast.
We drove into town and there was only one place that had one in stock that will fit that area and it's a cheap-a$$ lame 6 year warranty piece of junk. But it's taller than our existing one, over 100 pounds, and about 60" tall when not in the box.
Get it into the back of the truck and realize - how the hell am I going to tie this thing in so it stays upright??
I'm ready to give up, go get the store folks to take it back out and deliver it to us - and my wife says how about running straps all the way through the truck, through the back doors, and tie it in that way.
OK - I hate that as I could hear the fiberglass roof creak as I set the straps tight to hold the water heater upright.
The anchor points in these trucks is pitifully LOW - like 2" from the floor. A joke for strapping anything taller than 3 feet into the truck.
I needed something at least as high as the top of the box. My Chevy had tie-downs in the stake pockets. These have no stake pockets.
The sides of the box are really thin and flimsy (I pushed on them tonight and they flex and move easily) and I doubt anything bolted to the sides would stand having straps tightened up to hold a 110 pound 60" tall water heater upright.
It just feels like it would take some steel plate behind the bed walls to hold anything substantial.
Ideas? There's no way to haul anything tall and strap it in as it comes factory.
Great day today - my wife was running several embroidery projects and her machine stopped - again, but this time it was screaming and was HOT HOT HOT. So it's dead. A few hours later, I was spraying for bugs and ants as they like to move in as winter sets in, and I check the furnace filter and such every so often anyway - water heater leaking rusty water all over. It's toast.
We drove into town and there was only one place that had one in stock that will fit that area and it's a cheap-a$$ lame 6 year warranty piece of junk. But it's taller than our existing one, over 100 pounds, and about 60" tall when not in the box.
Get it into the back of the truck and realize - how the hell am I going to tie this thing in so it stays upright??
I'm ready to give up, go get the store folks to take it back out and deliver it to us - and my wife says how about running straps all the way through the truck, through the back doors, and tie it in that way.
OK - I hate that as I could hear the fiberglass roof creak as I set the straps tight to hold the water heater upright.
The anchor points in these trucks is pitifully LOW - like 2" from the floor. A joke for strapping anything taller than 3 feet into the truck.
I needed something at least as high as the top of the box. My Chevy had tie-downs in the stake pockets. These have no stake pockets.
The sides of the box are really thin and flimsy (I pushed on them tonight and they flex and move easily) and I doubt anything bolted to the sides would stand having straps tightened up to hold a 110 pound 60" tall water heater upright.
It just feels like it would take some steel plate behind the bed walls to hold anything substantial.
Ideas? There's no way to haul anything tall and strap it in as it comes factory.
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