I frequently loaded my Tacoma with a ton to a ton and a half,my 2003,the load of locust rounds in avatar was a ton.My 2016 has never had wood in it because all mine is now delivered or cut here.But there gain it's a Toyota ,my Chevy s-10 back in the pre Tacoma days burned out the bearings after a dozen oversized loads.What would be some guestimates if weight of 6 foot truck bed full of green wood rounds?
My 2016 has three leafs ,as did my 2003 ,on the 03 I added the extra,standard now on 16,never dropped with even the heaviest of loads,more than an inch or so.Toyota just replaced the leaf springs on my truck and they put in beefier ones than what was on there. A bed full of VERY green maple barely made it move.
fv
A nice load that's a fact.Looks like a six foot bed ,i used to stack my Tacoma similarly.Good stacking job.Air bags are your friend.......View attachment 186391 View attachment 186392
@Ctwoodtick seems this has turned into a d!ck comparing contest instead of answering your question.
At least blacktail and garfunkle are actually answering. Just to elaborate more on what they were getting at, you can take a guess that if packed well and roughly level I think it's still a bit under half a cord, maybe around 1/3 cord (just a guess). Then look up on the chart they linked too to find what species of wood you're hauling (they can vary a lot like 50%-200% almost) or if its a mix then pic a weight number in the middle. So lets say a mix of common hardwoods around here (cherry, ash, oak) is probably around 4000-4250 lbs per cord green, so 1/3 of 4250 is 1,416 lbs.
If you want to be exact you could measure the truck bed, height x width x length = volume. And a cord is 128 cubic feet. So multiply all dimensions in feet, or multiply inches then divide the answer by 1728 to convert cubic inches to cubic feet. If you're load is heaped up then you're going to have to guestimate a bit higher volume of course.
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