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My Utility Trailer is 8 years - makeover time
Posted on 10/14/25 at 12:36 pm
Posted on 10/14/25 at 12:36 pm
My Dakota 7x14 w dove tail and half gate is aging.
I’ve towed that trailer from Ascension parish to Texas, Ark, Missouri, Illinois, and Tennessee so many times.
Well this year it’s getting a total makeover. All new tires, bearings, new front winch, new tie down locations and the entire thing bed lined. It was in bad shape. I will redo the boards after this.
It’s not done yet, but here is some updates on how it’s going.
It was so chipped from them gravel roads and thousands of miles. But it’s looking much better! Can’t wait to see the finished product.

I’ve towed that trailer from Ascension parish to Texas, Ark, Missouri, Illinois, and Tennessee so many times.
Well this year it’s getting a total makeover. All new tires, bearings, new front winch, new tie down locations and the entire thing bed lined. It was in bad shape. I will redo the boards after this.
It’s not done yet, but here is some updates on how it’s going.
It was so chipped from them gravel roads and thousands of miles. But it’s looking much better! Can’t wait to see the finished product.

Posted on 10/14/25 at 12:43 pm to SenseiBuddy
quote:
I will redo the boards after this.
If you coat all six sides of the board with used motor oil and diesel those boards will last a lot longer. Especially treat the ends where it sucks up water.
The stuff they treat wood with today is crap compared to the old cancer causing stuff.
But the oil\diesel stuff works.
Posted on 10/14/25 at 12:50 pm to alphaandomega
I actually did that about 3 years ago. Used oil and a dollar general mop. Worked great!
Posted on 10/14/25 at 1:08 pm to SenseiBuddy
get it sandblasted and hot dip galvanized
Posted on 10/14/25 at 1:42 pm to alphaandomega
quote:
If you coat all six sides of the board with used motor oil and diesel those boards will last a lot longer. Especially treat the ends where it sucks up water.
The stuff they treat wood with today is crap compared to the old cancer causing stuff.
But the oil\diesel stuff works.
It might be possible to get white oak from a local sawmill for less than PT lumber from anywhere and it will last longer with no treatment at all. If you treat it with motor oil and diesel fuel it will last longer than the steel in the trailer. It will be sticky for a while though....
I picked up 4-16 inch diameter (inside the bark) X 17 foot long white oak logs a couple of weeks ago for $100. That is enough true 2x6's, not 1.5X5.5", to do 4 -16'X90 inch wide trailer decks. I will use a $20 blade and it took me about an hour and a half to load them, haul them and unload them and another couple of hours to mill them so 4 hours is a stretch, $120 in blades and logs for better lumber than I can buy at HD or Lowes and that much PT would be about $240 a trailer so $960 total. I have already had someone offer me $1250 for those logs milled into 2 inch slabs, flat sawn and green as a gord. I have one trailer I need one for and the rest I will "quarter saw" (as much as one can quarter saw with a bandsaw mill) to 5/4 and what whatever width I can get out of them which will take me about 4 and a half hours to do 3 logs, air dry them for about 120-150 days and just about any cabinet shop in the country would gladly pay $3.50 to $4 a BF for quarter sawn white oak at less than 15% MC for a grand total of around 450 BF or around $1575 to $1800. And I will have the new deck on my flatbed trailer and all it will cost me is about $120 an a 8 hour or so day. Not only is it pretty damned lucrative it also produces far superior lumber to anything one can buy from anyone other than a small sawyer who knows what they are doing.
Posted on 10/14/25 at 1:48 pm to SenseiBuddy
quote:
I actually did that about 3 years ago. Used oil and a dollar general mop. Worked great!
I did about 200 8 foot true 4X4 SYP posts, green as a gourd when treated, about 20 years ago and my dad and I built a fence at his place with them and they are as good today as they were the day we "planted" them. This is in Georgia clay so they have basically been underwater for 20 years and they are as solid as any cedar or PT post. We painted them completely with about 3-1 ratio of diesel fuel and motor oil and they stayed wet and then sticky for about 3 years but they eventually dried completely and have been good ever since. It works. Been working for a LONG time. I am about to build about 400 linear feet of fence on a lot and I have milled most of the cedar for it but I would not hesitate to have used SYP treated with oil and diesel fuel instead...I was given the cedar so that is a no brainer but if that hadn't happened it'd been SYP treated just like this.
Posted on 10/14/25 at 4:45 pm to SenseiBuddy
I replaced the 2x6s in my 6x10, freshened up the paint with Tractor Supply Farm Implement black rattle can and it came out awesome. 
Posted on 10/14/25 at 5:16 pm to Loup
How much that gonna run me on 5x10
Posted on 10/15/25 at 12:40 am to SenseiBuddy
I am about to do the same with my 5 x 10.
Need a little wire brush treatment. Re-paint, new wood, lubrication, re-wire, new used tires. I like the oil/diesel idea to make the wood last longer.

Need a little wire brush treatment. Re-paint, new wood, lubrication, re-wire, new used tires. I like the oil/diesel idea to make the wood last longer.
Posted on 10/17/25 at 6:53 pm to SenseiBuddy
As done as it will get.


This post was edited on 10/17/25 at 6:55 pm
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