My point was not to run cheaper all the time....having the ability to be more flexible and STILL make a profit to get out of a tough area...obviously more is always better then less...
Yeh that's a good point. Flexible is good, cheap is not. When I talk of GM or Ford I'm talking Ultra, Cargo, Terra etc. They are also flexible and cheap to run. I want one that's half RV and half freight hauler. Mine will be differant, it will have a fold out awning and an easy access grill. Pull into camper land, plug up and party. When done haul freight.
What kind of work??
One nickel becomes two nickles...two nickles become three nickles...You know
I am hearing a rumbling of blown shocks and front ends....maybe just some taking on too heavy loads....
Rocketman however doesn't appear to have a problem, but then again putting a load into it once and awhile would help too....LOL
That would be my opinion, but I don't have enough miles on mine to say much about it. My guess is that if you chase that rumor to the source, you'll find somebody maxing out the original 12,300 gvwr a few times a year.I haven't heard anything about that. If you heard those things about the Maxx's your hearing them about regular C/V's as well.
That would be my opinion, but I don't have enough miles on mine to say much about it. My guess is that if you chase that rumor to the source, you'll find somebody maxing out the original 12,300 gvwr a few times a year.
I'm not going to say that I have never fudged the gvwr a bit, but I don't get too crazy with it. I've turned down a few loads that would have paid good money...and at least one that I really needed to get me moving, but the potential damage to the equipment + the liabilities involved are just too much for me.
This is not the first heavy duty GM chasis that I've owned. The others were not expedite vehicles, but expedite is child's play compared to what I've seen some of these chasis put through. I could easily be proven wrong I guess, but until then, I'm more concerned about lightening strikes than I am the front end components of a HD GM chasis.
That's where the word comes from, mostly. In poems that have rhyme and meter, a rhythm to them (prosody), where each section comes to a natural resting place before the next section, each section of the poem (the completed rhythm) is called a stanza. The term was applied to music for the same reasons. Stanza is Italian for stand, or stopping or halting place, loosely from the Latin stantia, to stand temporarily.Stanza ? I don't even know if poem's have stanzas.
Thanks.
By noon I imagine we may see the next stanza.
Stanza ? I don't even know if poem's have stanzas.
I'm no poet.
My feet know it.
They're long fellows.
But that's another story.
So, to sum up, the multi-carrier model is really nothing more than the musical equivalent of a scordatura.
Exactly. It's fun, it works, has a cult following, but has great limitations in the range of applications where it can be used.A scorda..WHAAA?
Thanks to Wikipedia and Youtube, I was able to figure it out:
Scordatura Violin Improvisation - YouTube
Don't know how well it would fly at Juilliard, but it looks plenty useful for down-home fiddlin'
Exactly. It's fun, it works, has a cult following, but has great limitations in the range of applications where it can be used.