Torklift Fastgun Tiedowns for sled or Truck Deck

tpollon2

Active member
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
142
Reaction score
106
Location
Calgary
Fits all sled decks
Spread truck/sled deck load out on truck box
Aluminum platforms for sled deck legs
Comes with aluminum shims for different truck box rail heights
Prevents sled deck load from denting your truck box where the legs rest on the truck bed
 

Chronic Cat

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2014
Messages
350
Reaction score
849
Location
Camrose, Alberta
Cool concept, but 95% of guys will still use $30-$50.00 turnbuckles before they'll dish out 6 hundy for those. Plus, whomever trusts only the flimsy little loops in the corners only to secure their deck and sleds is crazy. Anyone who knows what is good for them bolts it down also. Just my $.02
 

LBZ

Active VIP Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,068
Reaction score
3,651
Location
Central Alberta
Been using PA turnbuckles and using the tie downs in the box for 15 years. No issues in two different trucks.
 

tpollon2

Active member
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
142
Reaction score
106
Location
Calgary
Been using PA turnbuckles and using the tie downs in the box for 15 years. No issues in two different trucks.
Some people like chevettes and some corvettes. These are hands down better in every way. Turnbuckles do come loose often enough. I have owned 8 decks. And sooner or later turnbuckles work their way loose. Driving highways and staging is a way different story than real back country riding and driving off the beaten path to get to remote areas
 

LBZ

Active VIP Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,068
Reaction score
3,651
Location
Central Alberta
Some people like chevettes and some corvettes. These are hands down better in every way. Turnbuckles do come loose often enough. I have owned 8 decks. And sooner or later turnbuckles work their way loose. Driving highways and staging is a way different story than real back country riding and driving off the beaten path to get to remote areas

Quite the assumption you seem to be making about me and where I take my truck or how I drive it.

BTW, a jam nut above the turnbuckle keeps them from ever coming loose. But what do I know. I just drive on the highway and I’ve only owned one deck over the past 15 years......
 

tpollon2

Active member
Joined
Oct 30, 2009
Messages
142
Reaction score
106
Location
Calgary
HIGHWAY QUEEN
Was that not 16 years?
A jam nut works on one side of a turnbuckle
If you don’t want them - don’t buy them
Have you nothing better to do than pick apart a superior way to secure a sled deck down?
Get a life!

Quite the assumption you seem to be making about me and where I take my truck or how I drive it.

BTW, a jam nut above the turnbuckle keeps them from ever coming loose. But what do I know. I just drive on the highway and I’ve only owned one deck over the past 15 years......
 

LBZ

Active VIP Member
Joined
Apr 16, 2010
Messages
3,068
Reaction score
3,651
Location
Central Alberta
HIGHWAY QUEEN
Was that not 16 years?
A jam nut works on one side of a turnbuckle
If you don’t want them - don’t buy them
Have you nothing better to do than pick apart a superior way to secure a sled deck down?
Get a life!

You’re the one that needs to get a life snowflake.
I never picked apart $hit. If someone wants to spend a pile of money on a cool looking product that works well then that’s fine. I don’t give a flying fornication what others want to spend their money on.

I simply disputed what you said about turnbuckles and box tie downs. I’ve never had a problem and neither have thousands of others I’m sure so to say it’s inadequate or a poor way to tie a deck down is misleading and untrue. That’s all.
 

Chronic Cat

Active VIP Member
Joined
Sep 14, 2014
Messages
350
Reaction score
849
Location
Camrose, Alberta
Top Bottom