Can you fit a full cord in a pickup box?

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BeatCJ
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You would have to stack the wood tight and high to fit a face cord let alone a real full cord in an 8' pickup bed.
Define Face Cord. As I cut wood, a face cord would be just over a foot deep in the bed of my truck. 128 cubic feet to a cord, 4x4x8. 1/3 of that with 16" wood, 43 cubic feet. 5 feet wide, 8' long, 1 foot 2 inches deep. Easy stacking. I used to use a Toyota as my wood hauler, it was perfect for a "Face Cord".
 
woodchuck357

woodchuck357

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A face cord is a stack 16' long x 4' tall, 18" - 20" long splits. There is no way to fit that much wood in a long bed without side rails.
Wrong, according to nearly all who use face cord to measure wood, face cord and rick are interchangeable to most. 4 x 8 feet by 16 inches for the face cord.
 
2PPacker

2PPacker

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Wrong, according to nearly all who use face cord to measure wood, face cord and rick are interchangeable to most. 4 x 8 feet by 16 inches for the face cord.
I am wrong on the terminology of "face cord", but around here firewood is sold by the 8' x 4' stack and is called a half cord, a 16' x 4' is called a full cord.
 
zogger

zogger

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I guess there are obviously several different definitions of face cord and rick.
http://www.firewood-for-life.com/rick-of-firewood.html

Yep! That's why just on the forum here we like to use the actual definition of a cord when talking measurements. Locally, no one cares, rick/rank/face/bush cord, stack,craigslist "load".... but here, if we can stay on the same page it makes the discussions easier.

Two loads of oak I did this weekend in the chevy 1/2 ton were roughly 1/3rd cord easy apiece. I had room plus suspension leftover.

Now in my ratsun truck, those would have been wicked full loads heaped up high..wouldn't have done it. Quarter cord..maybe.
 
tla100

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So which axle is this? I just looked at the diff, 14 bolt.

Not free floating, regular used on 1/2 tons. Free floating axles have bolts and hub that protrude thru the middle of the rim,similar to the front axle "hub", only the look...like this

th
 
Red97

Red97

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Not sure when they started putting full free float axles on trucks. Sometimes they called them a "heavy half" and used 6-8 lugs instead of 5.

Gm used the 14bolt 6 lug was used in the 88-98 truck's Light duty 3/4 ton

Actually gm made a 5 lug 14 bolt semi float for the 454ss pickup 89-91 If it came with a th400 trans they had 3.73 gears and the 4l80 trans got 4:10's
 
066blaster

066blaster

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It could be done. If you run the stacks the opposite way of the picture. 4 stacks 8 foot long 3 foot high. Plus a little extra for the wheel wells. You would need a 2x 10 rack. It would be heavy and your splits would have to be 16 inches or a little less to get em in there. 16 inches is standard around me if you cut them longer your just giving them extra.
 

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