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OK, so, not sure if you noticed, but on quite a bit of equipment, including the deuces and 5 tons with beds and comm/electrical boxes, there's a strip of wood, usually ~1/2-3/4" thick, that is put between the frame rail, and the frame of the box/bed.
I've been told a couple things, maybe some or all of it is true?
The wood acts as a slide to reduce friction when getting the box/bed on/off.
The wood acts as a shock absorber.
The wood acts as a flexible shim that, because it flexes, prevents damage to the frame/rails if it gets overextended, eg wood breaks instead of twisting metal.
Is any of that true?
What's the true purpose?
The reason I ask, is, I'm gonna be mounting another box to a deuce frame, and I'm debating on metal <-> metal, or metal <->wood <-> metal, and how thick the wood can be, eg can you use a 4x4 instead of a 1x4 to add a couple inches in height/flex or should you use a metal spacer if you want to add a couple inches in frame height...?
I've been told a couple things, maybe some or all of it is true?
The wood acts as a slide to reduce friction when getting the box/bed on/off.
The wood acts as a shock absorber.
The wood acts as a flexible shim that, because it flexes, prevents damage to the frame/rails if it gets overextended, eg wood breaks instead of twisting metal.
Is any of that true?
What's the true purpose?
The reason I ask, is, I'm gonna be mounting another box to a deuce frame, and I'm debating on metal <-> metal, or metal <->wood <-> metal, and how thick the wood can be, eg can you use a 4x4 instead of a 1x4 to add a couple inches in height/flex or should you use a metal spacer if you want to add a couple inches in frame height...?