Every drop-bottom bin RDR sells is reconditioned: repaired where needed and confirmed fully functional, not cosmetically restored to like-new. Because this bin type has a moving part, reconditioning here covers more than the frame.
Hinge Integrity
The hinge is the part of the bin that sees the most repeated mechanical stress — opening and closing under load every cycle. Reconditioning means checking the hinge for wear, deformation, or cracking at the weld points and confirming it opens and closes as designed under load.
Latch and Pin Condition
Whatever mechanism holds the floor panel closed during a lift — latch, pin, or catch, depending on the model — gets checked for wear that could let the floor open prematurely, or seize and fail to open on demand. Both failure modes matter for safety and function.
Weld Checks at Stress Points
The hinge point and the corners of the floor panel take the most repeated stress on this bin design. These welds get inspected and repaired as needed — the same standard applied to weld points on any reconditioned steel bin, focused on where a drop-bottom design concentrates the extra load.
Everything Else: Standard Used-Steel-Bin Inspection
Beyond the mechanism, a reconditioned drop-bottom bin gets the same treatment as any reconditioned steel bin from RDR — structural integrity of the walls and floor, rust and corrosion addressed, and cosmetic wear left as-is where it doesn’t affect function. Reconditioned means repaired and working, not showroom cosmetic condition.
See Used vs. New Drop-Bottom Bins: What’s the Real Difference? for the full cost comparison, or browse current Drop-Bottom Bins inventory.
