Ready for Canada day!
22x18, stored behind passenger seat.What size kick?
I had my truck for 2 days and hauled 11 sheets of 3/4 CDX plywood - it sticks out a bit with the 5' bed but it drove great. Hardly could tell I had a load. I don't know how much they weighed, but I wouldn't be surprised if they were 50 lbs a piece.
Edit: Actually, according to this website:
http://www.derose.net/steve/resources/engtables/materials.html
They weigh 68 lbs a piece, so that means I was hauling about 750 lbs! Wow! It did GREAT!
The only bad part was that somehow I dented one of the wheel wells doing that - not sure how, but oh well, it is a truck.
Same way I did in my 2005 Ranger - the plywood sits on the wheel wells one end goes up front and the other end sits on the tailgate - hope that makes sense - the new Ranger is ALMOST 48" between the wheel wells, but not quite (45" or something like that). The deeper bed helps things a bit though.Since it's not 48 inches between the wheel wells how did you set up the hauling? In 2010 I was going to buy an F150 but with the Sport trac being phased out I got 6k in rebates so I tried it and after 14 months I Hated it. I was doing alot of remodeling and got tired of breaking drywall and fighting 4x8 sheets of stuff plus the bed was only 4 ft or so deep and I had a bunch of material hanging over the tailgate. When I got my F150 with a 5.5ft bed and a tall tailgate I only had a little over a foot hanging over the bed. My remodeling days are about gone so I bought the ranger after it grew on me, I was disappointed that Ford didnt learn the hard way with the Sport trac bed, I realize it was a glorified grocery getter but they could have widened the ranger wheel wells. After I see some different ways guys haul 4x8 stuff I will pick one that works for me.