I appreciate the sentiment, but no, I wouldn’t make a good trainer. I learned what I know on the fly and do it all by instinct. I would have a hell of a time trying to explain it to anyone.
Tandem placement and turning radius
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by expedite_it, Jan 22, 2022.
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He failed out of CR England driving school. Has several topics over his time here. EXACTLY like this one. When it comes to lack of common knowledge. So yes. We need to be afraid. 7 years 1 million miles and sadly lacking knowledge.InTooDeep, Long FLD, Hammer166 and 1 other person Thank this. -
loudtom Thanks this.
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Now, if you’re trying to make too sharp of a turn with too much rear overhang it’s possible to hit something behind the tandem on the blind side.Rocks, expedite_it and loudtom Thank this. -
FLD says that once you get the tandems past the obstacle, you're good to go. I think that this is generally true, but only because even with the tandems all the way forward, the center point of the tandems is still only 8-10 feet from the rear of the trailer. To me, it seems like once you get within 8 feet or so of the rear of the trailer, you're probably going to be clear to pass the obstacle even if the tandems were all the way back.
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InTooDeep and Wasted Thyme Thank this.
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But on Merriam Webster's online dictionary, I found a definition of apex that I think is probably the meaning of the word that you are using in this context.
Definition of APEX
3: the point of sharpest curvature in a path (such as that followed by a turning vehicle)a driver hitting the apex as he races around a cornerAt the apex of the turn his rear wheels apparently came unstuck from the oil-drenched groove.— Robert F. Jones
That's the definition of apex that you are using; correct?
If so, you are saying that the point of sharpest curvature in my track around a curve is at the tandems. So the rear of the trailer sticks out behind. That DOES make sense to me!
I think you helped me clear up what Long FLD wrote in post #61. Thank you. I needed someone to break this down for me. Now I think I understand the scenario of the OP 100%. Both from my experiences when I was a trainer and from my experiences and observations at school and talking with a friend of mine at a trade school, when you try to help someone understand something, most people will just pretend like they understand something when they don't understand it. This is no lie: When I was a trainer, I once had a student from South Korea who did not understand English very well. I would explain something about trucking to my Korean-American student, and I would ask him if he understood what I just told him. My student would then respond "Yes". Then I would ask my student, "What did I just say?" and he would say "I don't know" lol
P.S. When you said the word apex, did you mean the point of sharpest curvature in a path? -
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