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#146249 03/25/2006 2:57 AM
Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 4
T
Junior Member
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Joined: Mar 2006
Posts: 4
CAN ANYBODY TELL ME HOW MUCH MY 63 c-60 CAN HAUL AND HOW MUCH WEIGHT CAN THE DUMPBED DUMP?


Trey Deluna
#146250 03/25/2006 6:51 AM
Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,317
J
Former Workshop Owner
Former Workshop Owner
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Joined: Nov 2004
Posts: 2,317
My '59 Viking 40 will haul and dump 4 ton easily. I believe it's rated at 14,000 lbs (including it's own weight). In that case 4 tons would be the limit. I would guess that a C-60 would be rated around 18 to 20,000 lbs.

I am sure that someone will come along with more certain information.

By the way, welcome to the "Stovebolt".

John


~ J Lucas
1941 Chevy 1/2-Ton
1942 Chevy 1.5-Ton SWB
In the Gallery
1959 Chevy Apache 32 Fleetside
My Flicker Photos!
#146251 03/25/2006 6:59 AM
Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 587
G
'Bolter
'Bolter
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Posts: 587
There should be a tag in your door frame or in glovebox, stating the GVW of your truck. Go to gravel pit with truck and half tank of gas in it, get weighed empty. Subtract your weight from GVW on truck plate, you have best SAFE load for truck. Many times it can haul more, but SAFE limit for brakes and suspension is manufacturer's statement. My older 2-ton was a 16,000 GVW, but some later years they upped that with stronger frames, springs and axles. I always figure about ton for 1000 lbs of load, so around 4 yards is probly close. Check to see what your dump frame has on it for an ID plate too. It will give capacity or at least volume of the bed. If small wheelbase, probly not over 5yards, but may be as small as 3 yard dump.


G.L. Grumpy's
Old Iron Ranch
Huntington, IN 46750


MM R tractor, Speedex
and Power King tractors
#146252 03/25/2006 7:04 AM
Joined: Feb 2000
Posts: 587
G
'Bolter
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Posts: 587
Forgot to mention/.....better have a license plate to match your load or bigger than load, or if you get stopped, could be bad trouble with law. When I had my 54, I put a 16,000 lb plate on it for hauling. Next size down was 11,000 in INdiana, and wouldn't allow much of a load when truck weighed 7000 or more. Big price for big plate also. Some states let you buy it by the quarter of year, so you can have it correct only when you really use it, like in summer or fall. Indiana don't do that. Here we can get half year rate ONLY if the first half of year has already passed! And that year doesn't always start in January either, think it's in Febuary here, pretty tricky, huh?


G.L. Grumpy's
Old Iron Ranch
Huntington, IN 46750


MM R tractor, Speedex
and Power King tractors
#146253 03/26/2006 11:03 PM
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 2,733
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
Joined: Dec 2003
Posts: 2,733
For the purpose of figuring the body capacity it is a common industry practice to allow 3000 lbs per cu.yd. Some commodities will weigh a lot more but dry gravel, asphalt, dry earth and many others all weight a little under 3000 per yd. The hoist is sized to the body capacity so it will probably lift more than it will hold unless it's full of cannon balls or concrete. Hoist capacity is calculated by class, i.e., 20,30,40, etc. which is the ammount of torque around the rear hinge. Common hoists in 1963 for your chassis would have been a class 30 rated at about 10-12 tons depending on body length. A common single axle dump of that time would have ab 8'x6'-6" ID body with 24" sides/30" ends and rated at 4/5 cu. yds.


1953 Chevy 5-window 3100
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Dave
Engine & Driveline Moderator

If you can't make seventy by an easy road, don't go. ~~ Mark Twain
#146254 03/27/2006 3:09 AM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 215
O
Shop Shark
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Posts: 215
How much it can hual? or How much it should haul?
It could haul 20000lbs to 24000lbs (I have done it)
But realy you shouldent haul more than 18000lbs to 19000lbs


Luke Dahlin

1946 Chevy 2 ton
1966 Chevy 2 ton
1969 Chevy 3/4 ton 4wd
http://www.stovebolt.com/gallery/dahlin_luke_1969.html]1969 Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4
#146255 04/01/2006 5:16 AM
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 24
T
Wrench Fetcher
Wrench Fetcher
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Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 24
I have a '53 6400, 8.25-20 rubber. Many years ago when it still had the 216 in it a friend and I cleared a cherry orchard for the nice wood..anyway, I weighed the truck loaded at 24,000. that was way too heavy but it did it.


'41 Chevy G7107
'42 International M-3L-4
'44 stude US6
'50 GMC 250
'53 Chevy 6400


God bless our military, radical dictators and the ignorant people who follow them for enabling the USA to build these fine machines.

Travis Weedman
#146256 07/10/2006 4:24 AM
Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 9
J
Junior Member
Junior Member
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Joined: Oct 2005
Posts: 9
i got a 61 c60 flat dump crossed the scales at the log yard grossing 27000 pounds most logs were 17ft 10in my truck empty is bout 9600lbs


1961 c65 flat dump
1973 c50 flat bed
#146257 07/10/2006 5:20 AM
A
Anonymous
Unregistered
Anonymous
Unregistered
A
Hello My 1960 C60 has 24000 painted on the door from years gone by it will haul every bit of it. I stops fine loaded (7 tons). truck empty weights 9800 and 7 ton brings it up to the max. 24000 plates are for 24000 so every thing is good. single cylinder hoist has no problem with that much weight.

#146258 07/10/2006 8:04 PM
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 187
B
Shop Shark
Shop Shark
B Offline
Joined: Dec 2001
Posts: 187
My father's '63 C60 (292 CID, 4-speed, 2-speed rear, Garwood dump, Heil single cylinder hydraulics) had a GVWR of 19,500 lbs. When I was in my late teens and working in his construction business I'd pull up to the scales at the quarry and leave with a total weight of around 31,000 lbs. Truck pulled it no problem and dumping was easy. The truck handled it perfectly...although in hindsight I wouldn't recommend such practices…


Burgie

1964 Chevy C60 w/ Garwood dump, 327 CID, New Process 540C 5-Speed w/ Chevy 15,000 lb. 2-speed rear axle
1966 Chevy C60 w/ 292 CID, Chevy 4-speed w/ Chevy 15,000 lb. single speed rear axle

[b]Burgie's 1964 Chevy C60 Restoration Site[/b]

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