The present invention relates to truck bed ramps of one or multiple pieces that hook onto or over the tailgate of the truck.
GMC, Ford, Toyota, the big three, own the “full-size” Pickup truck revenue, and more importantly, profitability in the full-size space. For 2019 GMC released a new line of trucks with a built in step-ladder tailgate. This makes access to the bed of the truck easier. However, a step ladder is still tedious to use and could cause lower back injuries when moving large or heavy items into the truck bed such as a refrigerator or mulch/gravel/pavers.
The solution as currently available on the market offers only two options: 1) The user purchases a folding aircraft aluminum ramp. The ramp props up on the lowered tailgate. These ramps are death traps. Go to YouTube and search truck ramp fails or 4wheeler ramp fails. These ramps do not securely attach to the back of the tailgate. Thus, the ramp can easily fall off the tailgate during use.
In addition, these ramps do not have guard rails, meaning that if a wheel was to go over the side of the ramp an accident will occur. Finally, they take up space in the tailgate and there is no good way to store them during travel. Many people believe these ramps are so dangerous that they purchase a small trailer to pull a 4wheeler, etc. which renders the truck bed moot. 2) The user purchases an after-market tailgate which has a ramp built-in to it. This requires the user to dispose of the tailgate that matches the truck. After spending $40-70k on a truck, a buyer wants the tailgate to match their truck. These aftermarket tailgates are ugly. They look like a metal cage contraption that sits on the back of the truck permanently. In addition, they are not easy to deploy and are heavy and require multiple horizontal folds to deploy and store. Ford has sold a truck with a ramp system as an add-on.
A YouTube video of a guy showing it off can be found online. This system is two “track” rails that are mounted to both sides of the tailgate when stored (ugly and take up space). In order to deploy, the user must unscrew both rails at 2 different points each (front and back) from the stored position (which is a royal pain). This allows rail ramps to be removed from the back of the truck. The user then slides the rails onto a tongue and groove on the back of the lowered tailgate. The user must then move both rails to align perfectly with the wheels of say a 4wheeler, prior to attempting to get it up the rails and into the bed.
Because there is no guard rail, if a tire slips off one of these slender track rails, an accident will occur. Once complete, the user must remove both track rails and re-install them on both sides of the truck bed and reattach the wingnut screws. A cool add, but not very useful, because it is dangerous and difficult/time consuming to deploy. In addition, a dolly or wheelbarrow could not be used with these track rails as they are too slender (a little more than the width of a 4wheeler tire).
An extendable truck bed ramp is housed adjacent the bed of the truck and tailgate when the tailgate is lowered and open. The ramp deploys using a track system inside the bed of the truck and the tailgate respectively. The ramp contains side rails for easy access with items such as hand trucks, ATVs, and other wheeled items. The method for joining a truck bed with a loading surface includes attaching at least two parallel tracks to a floor of a truck bed and to a floor side of a tailgate configured to form continuous tracks based on a foldout of the tailgate, permanently embedding into the at least two parallel tracks each, at least two complementary sliders and moving the truck ramp with folding side rails into a joining position between the truck bed and the loading surface via the at least four sliders attached there beneath.
The present invention is an extendable truck bed ramp, built into the truck during manufacturing.
The present disclosure is simple to deploy, not visible when not in use, secure and has guard rails built into the ramp for safety. It would be as effortless as possible to deploy for the user (hit a button and it deploys or stores itself).
foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments of the present invention have been presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. The exemplary embodiment was chosen and described in order to best explain the principles of the invention and its practical application, to thereby enable others skilled in the art to best utilize the invention and various embodiments with various modifications as are suited to the particular use contemplated.