My feelings are hurt! Trailer is made to Federal NHTSA and Idaho DOT specs and gets inspected at the DMV with VIN plate made, don't know how else to make a good box trailer other than with new 5" channel with multipass welding, grade 8 bolts, utility trailer plates, new 2"hitch, shocks and safety chains, load range E tires with great tread, new DOT wiring and taillites! Trailer is under 80" wide and under 30' long with less than 8500GVW, so no side markers req'd. I've run them 1700 miles across the country with no problems. I've seen "utility" trailers driving across the country, any recommendations what else to improve?
So what I'm seeing is that I should just drive them myself and spend the 350 bucks in fuel to get it done one way? Do transport haulers private or commercial get paid to drive back cross country empty with nothing in tow? What do the Indiana 1ton truck camper haulers driving out to Seattle do when they offload their delivery? Are they off the clock and pay out of their pocket to drive back for #2 delivery? I'm trying to figure this out how $ is made hauling oneway and hauling air the other way?
If this is a legit trailer, it sounds like there's really no easy way for anyone to haul it across the country. I would have thought a 30ft camper would be more work to haul than a utility trailer! : ) I know I could go through putting the trailer on a "transport trailer" but was inquiring more about the trailer being hauled.
I just figured than taking my diesel truck and 18ft trailer to haul stacked trailer over to the midwest and then "deadheading" back to the NW, having one driver loaded both ways instead of two drivers running empty would make sense.
Thanks all for the advice, any other ideas? or even phone #s of private individuals (if this would even work?)
=Jimbo