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A service body truck is great if going out on service calls. An enclosed utility trailer can do everything a service truck can do plus. Try to haul and store 16' landscape fabric, fence rails, etc. on a service body. Just saying that's all.
This construction contractor also become a lawn jockey due to popular demand from customers. It goes both ways.
All I'm doing is drawing awareness :)

We carry rolls of fabric and everything you mentioned on our utility body. All the tools are there, no loading and unloading at the yard, etc. It all remains on the truck, and each object has its place.

Utility bodies come in different lengths and various configurations are offered. The possibilities are bountiful. They even have enclosed utility bodies available. A utility body is not just for plumbers :)
 
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I bought a new 7x14 trailer last year and set it all up with hooks & shelves. I had E track in my last trailer and decided not to use it this time. I screwed a piece of 3/4 plywood on the left side so we could screw hooks anywhere, not just to the studs. Shelves built with 2x4's & plywood. Also bought a tool chest with drawers and screwed it to the floor on the far right side. Everything has its place and we can find what we need with our eyes closed. Here you go
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Ours is very similar with a small work table and vise attached. Haven't used it on job sites for the last couple of years as most of our work has been just small jobs. It gets used mostly right now for storage Maybe when our market picks back up it will get used more.
 
Two of our trailers have a built in urinal. I plan to put one in mine this year.

Funnel in the front left corner with a hose running down though the floor and routed to the right side of the trailer. One of our foreman even built a soap dispenser with bleach water to rinse it out! Clearly there are jobs you can't use it on but it sure beats having pee bottles all over the trailer!
Wells Cargo used to build a trailer with a porta-crapper. For scrapers. Not sure if they still do.
 
Nice looking trailer. Isn't a deck over where the wheels are under the trailer though?
Push a button and the deck raises up it turns into a deckover 102" wide, push a button and it drops back down to a low boy equipment hauler... Canadian eh, we got it figured out lol
 
Discussion starter · #37 ·
Looking good! Nice and organized, the way it should be. Where are the screed boards & pipes, and grade stakes? Or are you not finished yet?
We use 18" wood stakes to set our sand poles on. They are in the bucket under the shelf.

I'm not sure where to put the screed pipes and boards. We use 10' long poles. I might have to build a box on the floor or something?
 
We use 18" wood stakes to set our sand poles on. They are in the bucket under the shelf.

I'm not sure where to put the screed pipes and boards. We use 10' long poles. I might have to build a box on the floor or something?
I used 6" PVC with a glued end cap on one end and a threaded end cap on the other for my last trailer. It fit six 10' long poles and a screed board inside it.
 
There's no silver bullet to any of this, everyone has their own way of doing things. It's whatever works for them.

Our trucks, as many know, are setup with the main tools on board. All the hand tools, wheelbarrows, blower, chains, binders, etc. They all have SNG bodies. We have two hardscape bodies which we set down on a jobsite when we start and pickup when we are done. They have all our hardscape tools in them. Why the job bodies? I have no tires, axles, registration, maintenance, inspections, etc. Plus no one can steal them.

The hand tools stay on the trucks. if its raining one morning, and we have to call an audible at 7 a.m. that truck is ready to go to another side to do something for the day.

Once the job body is set down, we put the mason bodies on the trucks that night when they come back to the shop. From there, we can haul 8 tons of stone, sand, skid of pavers, etc. They all have fold down sides. One truck per crew, one set of tools.

Equipment is moved on our trailers, OR, and this is the big plus if we have to get a machine back to the shop and we don't have a trailer on site, we can put it in the SNG body and bring it back to the shop. Which tends to be really nice if something needs fixed all of a sudden.

It works for us and is extremely efficient. But there are many other concepts that work too.

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