Get a safer, more gradual incline for loading your 4-wheeled equipment with low ground clearance onto your truck bed. Extra wide, serrated aluminum panels give tires grip, even in wet weather. Ramps resist rust and come with safety straps.
Features:
Specs:
Note: Use safety straps at all times. Do not exceed 30" deck height when loading or unloading.
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Videos are provided as a guide only. Refer to manufacturer installation instructions and specs for complete information.
Hello, neighbors, Steven here with etrailer.com. Let's take a look at our Erickson aluminum loading ramp set. Now, folks, these are gonna be a non-folding set. They are 77 inches long by 13 inches wide, rated at 1,250 pounds total capacity. So, folks, like I just said, 1,250 pounds total, you're gonna get two of these. They are 625 pounds rating a piece.
(ramp clanging) Now, they are made of a nice welded aluminum capacity. They're lightweight, they're gonna resist corrosion and stuff like that being aluminum. Again, they are 13 inches wide, 77 inches tall. Now, that 13-inch wide surface is gonna be great for mowers, four-wheeled equipment, dirt bikes, those kind of things, maybe some other yard equipment. The extruded aluminum here (ramp clanging) with the integrated traction plate is gonna make a nice stable connection between the ramp and your truck or trailer.
Now, the manufacturer recommends not having anything more than a 30-degree max incline, and you wanna make sure you're using the included safety straps whenever you're hooking those up. (ramp clanging) So the safety strap, you're gonna get two of them, one per ramp. I just put them both on this ramp for demo purposes. You got a S-hook down here, and then you've got the cam buckle here that's spring loaded. Now, what you'll do is you'll put it around the ramp, like I've got it here, loop it on itself, and then that would come down and hook up underneath the trailer frame or maybe the bumper of the truck if you're on the truck.
And you're gonna cinch that down tight. What that's gonna do is gonna keep that ramp from slipping out from underneath you while you're loading or unloading. Now, again, since they're aluminum, they are lightweight. I'm gonna give you a little closer look of the end. So that's the end that's gonna lean on the surface.
Now, another cool feature, you've got this little slot here on this side, and then on the other side, you've got like a little knuckle, I'm calling it. The cool thing with these ramps is you can take two of these (ramp clanging) and you can connect them. So you just slide those two slots into the corresponding other side, and now you've got one single ramp that's wider (ramp clanging) and connected together. So maybe a push mower or tiller, I don't know, snow blower, something like that, that maybe has a wider footprint. And you need to make one ramp that's securely together. And then when it's time to take that apart, simply pull it back off of the nub and then you're ready to go for putting everything away. Well, folks, that's gonna wrap it up. Just a quick look today at our Erickson loading ramps. I'm Steven, thanks for watching.
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