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Tips for Maintaining Trailer Floors

When it comes to maintaining your dry van hardwood or composite trailer floor, fleet maintenance managers should follow the Boy Scout motto: Be prepared.

Kate Harlow
Kate HarlowAssociate Editor
October 14, 2013
Tips for Maintaining Trailer Floors

 

4 min to read


When it comes to maintaining your dry van hardwood or composite trailer floor, fleet maintenance managers should follow the Boy Scout motto: Be prepared.

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Most of the dry vans running on the road today were built with a hardwood floor.

According to John Carr, vice president of sales and marketing with Havco, about 80% of the hardwood used is American white and red oak, which is spec’d as an oak floor. Oak’s popularity comes from its natural resistance to rotting.

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Another wood-based flooring option is composite floors, which typically are a hardwood floor that “incorporates a specially designed glass/epoxy composite reinforcement sheet applied to the bottom-side of the floor,” Carr says.

Preventive maintenance and proactive repairs will go a long way to help keep both flooring types from failing, but the first step in floor maintenance happens before the trailer hauls its first load.

When it comes to maintaining your dry van hardwood or composite trailer floor, fleet maintenance managers should spec your trailer flooring with an eye on reducing future maintenance.

Spec’ing with floor maintenance in mind

Plan ahead and spec your trailer flooring with an eye on reducing future maintenance.

Simply put: “Spec the floor system that is right for the application,” said David Giesen, director of sales for Stoughton Trailers.

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In general terms, you should consider the type of load, the length of time you are going to keep the trailer, and the geographical location you are going to be running, according to David Gilliland, vice president of branch sales and operations for Great Dane Trailers.

More specifically, the floor system’s (i.e. floor, cross-member and side rail) design needs to match the loading weight and frequency of the freight being transported, adds Havco’s Carr.

What you’re putting inside the trailer may not be as important than how you’re loading and unloading, says Larry Roland, director of marketing for Utility Trailers.

“If forklifts are being used as opposed to pallet jacks, the combined weight of the forklift and the product being carried should be understood to determine if the ‘forklift capacity’ floor rating on the trailer meets this requirement.”

When it comes to supporting the floor, there are many options in terms of various materials, shapes and spacing, says Hyundai Vice President-Engineering Group Christian Lee.

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“There are many different combinations of the floor material and cross member specification to make up different floor ratings, which will affect the floor longevity and endurance,” Lee says.

As important as floor rating requirements is keeping in mind the geographical location where the trailer is going to be running.

In regions where there is more precipitation, there will naturally be more moisture. Wood expands and contracts depending on the amount of moisture it is exposed to.

“When deciding on a wood floor system, make sure to verify there is an adequately sized crusher bead, which allows the wood board to expand. This will help prevent buckling as the wood board expands,” Rodney Ehrlich, chief technical officer with Wabash National.

One of the most important steps you can take to maintain your trailer floor comes actually during the spec’ing process.

Tips to keep it in tip top shape
Beyond spec’ing, there are other things you can do to prevent problems.
Key is protecting the floor from moisture.

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“Keeping the doors open and letting rain water onto the floor has always been a problem of rotting out floors,” says Craig Bennett, senior vice president sales and marketing at Utility Trailer Manufacturing. “There are materials to seal the rear of the floors to minimize the rot, or keeping doors closed is an option.”

Great Dane’s Gilliland agrees. “When fleets leave doors open—sitting in yards or when sitting at the dock – water can get in and sit at the rear. This can cause a lot of damage.”

According to Jim Jannell, the national sales manager at Prolam Flooring Co., “Ninety-nine percent of floor failures and maintenance costs associated with a laminated hardwood floor occur at the rear of a dry van near the rear doors, and is related to excessive moisture content in the wood. The higher the moisture content in the wood, the less strength and stiffness in the floor.”

Jannell recommends limiting moisture exposure from the top and bottom of your floor, including when cleaning. Instead of power washing the floor, he recommends sweeping or using air pressure.

Dry van trailers floors of all types should be inspected on a regular basis.
If a problem with the floor or a floor system component is discovered, they should be repaired as needed, notes Havco’s Carr. “It is useful to inspect the bottom side of floors to determine any damage caused due to fork truck load cycles and also due to overloading. Damaged sections of floors can be patched with repair boards.”

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Kent Musick, product specialist – fleet maintenance solutions with Rockland Flooring, notes that many fleet managers overlook the floor while performing a preventive maintenance check. That is a mistake.

“Many fleets have a checklist of items that include landing gear, suspension, and lighting, but many overlook the mechanics of a floor,” Musick says.
“Early detection of a potential issue could prevent a catastrophic failuredown the road.”

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