72mph # Swift Will get you FIRED
Discussion in 'Report A BAD Trucking Company Here' started by Xsd, Nov 20, 2010.
Page 9 of 19
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As Canuck said and Dick alluded to, you are responsible for the control of your vehicle. I said under most circumstances, a jake is safe to use when it's raining. But then again, I always have my vehicle under control and will never turn that jake on in ice, heavy oil or a gully-washer rainstorm.
Dick is right in saying the jake is an aid. But it is also a valuable tool. Yes, I have driven a truck that didn't have one. It bit big time because I was always two gears lower than everyone else hauling the same weight on the same hill. But I still did not have to touch my brakes but maybe once per minute to feather them a little and break the momentum.
If you have to brake more often than about once a minute, you are in too high a gear for that downgrade. Your engine should hold you. If it doesn't, you better downshift as soon as you can without frying your brakes. -
In the split second your out of gear, you have no control. The truck will speed up to a point to where it becomes impossible to get the truck back into gear. When this happens, your best option is to bend over & kiss your arse goodbye while you hope for the best. -
Hmmmmmm.......I've downshifted on grades many times over the years without a problem.
I don't think I ever lost control...Most of the time I'm pretty sure I'm not dead from crashing and burning after downshifting on a downgrade!
Hold on a second, Let me take my pulse....
Nope...I'm not dead yet!doubledragon5, LindaLou, walstib and 1 other person Thank this. -
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Redd, you are right. It is to be avoided as much as possible. However, there are times when it is necessary to downshift going down a hill.
The way to do it is brake, but not firmly. Bring your RPM down to about 900, then don't waste any time shifting. And I mean don't waste time. You will have about a three second window to get the gear you need. It's not a rookie maneuver. The key is to realize you need to drop a gear...before you actually need to drop it and then git 'er done.
That's why they teach in "schools" to go down a hill in one gear lower than you went up. -
I had to down shift many times, while I was driving OTR, it can be done, but like already said you have to do it quick..
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I was taught to go down TWO gears.
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I don't buy into that theory at all. There's no guarantee that one side of any given hill is exactly the same angle as the other. You can go up a nice long gradual incline and drop straight down off the other side. One gear isn't going to cut it.
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