A loaded fertilizer buggy has a high center of gravity compared to a regular trailer, and the wheel base and tongue are fairly short. Even if the buggy has good brakes, when braking the high center of gravity over a short wheelbase can shift a lot of weight to the front buggy axle and to the tongue. The springs and rear axle of a half ton can carry maybe half the load of a one ton, so a half ton would squat a lot more trying to stop a loaded fertilizer buggy than your one ton does. A lot of guys say they get by just fine ("never had an accident") overloading trucks by twice their capacity, but it's not always safe and rarely legal.
If your F350 is older it may not have much trade-in value. Can you keep it around to pull the occasional heavy loads? Most insurance companies will let you insure a truck for only the months it will be on the road. A half ton will cost less to buy and less to operate than a 3/4 or one ton. If most of your driving is with light loads, two trucks might be the most economical solution.
The cattle trailer and hay wagons already sound like big loads for a half ton pickup, especially if the wagons don't have brakes, a 3/4 ton would handle them better. If you only want to keep one truck I would look for a 3/4 ton or another one ton truck. Good luck.
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Today's Featured Article - Product Review: Black Tire Paint - by Staff. I have been fortunate in that two of my tractors have had rear tires that were in great shape when I bought the tractor. My model "H" even had the old style fronts with plenty of tread. My "L" fronts were mismatched Sears Guardsman snow tires, which I promptly tossed. Well, although these tires were in good shape as far as tread was concerned, they looked real sad. All were flat, but new tubes fixed that. In addition to years and years of scuffing and fading, they had paint splattered on
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