Minimum landing gear clearance?

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by double yellow, Jul 14, 2012.

  1. Cranky Yankee

    Cranky Yankee Cranky old ######

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    i heard somewhere there were grease fittings for landing gear
    I'm just sayin
     
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  3. FLATBED

    FLATBED Road Train Member

    Yes but who GREASES anything now days they are DRIVERS not MECHANICS :)
     
  4. flyingmusician

    flyingmusician Road Train Member

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    Jamestown, NC
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    yeah, no #### lol

    i've got so many tools under my bunk there isn't really room for anything else.....full tool box, hammers of all sizes, crowbars, wire kits, a little bit of everything including a small grease gun for just that purpose....comes from growing up on the farm i guess where you had to learn how to fix things or be stuck out in the field with a long walk back to the house lol.....generally speaking my company does good maintenance but sometimes you get the odd one that's been out there awhile and hasn't made it in for a pm.....

    lights, mudflaps hanging loose, stiff landing gear, bent door latches or catches....you name it i've had to do a little bit of anything out there that has saved a road service call and uneccesary downtime on the ####### elog.....

    and was replacing a light once at a customer and saw the road service pull up to another companies truck the guy had called them out for the same light i was replacing on the trailer......no surprise it was a younger guy.....seems that's what the world is coming to now.....and no telling what they charged for that

    company gave us a toolbox with lights, fitting, gaskets, all manner of minor items that we can fix on the road but there's too many guys out there that feel it's 'not their job' to maintain the small things they can maintain with just a little initiative and effort.

    not saying anything about the OP or his original post and situation btw because I don't now him or his company and their policies.....just a general statement about the state of things out here.....but seems like those of us of a certain age and/or background and upbringing will jump in there and take care of these kinds of things (or even know about them to start with haha) and those of another generation, for the most part, would rather pick up the phone and have someone do it for them.
     
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  5. FLATBED

    FLATBED Road Train Member

    I sat beside a newer driver week or so ago he was waiting for road service to come out and FIX his air leak , ( glad hand seal ) had no idea of where to start looking. Tells me he was getting tired of the poor condition of his companies trailer as in the past week he waited twice for lights to be replaced and thats using up his hours costing him MILES.
     
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  6. flyingmusician

    flyingmusician Road Train Member

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    lol yeah can't tell you how many of those gromments i've replaced.....one of our shop guy always hands me a few when i walk in the shop he knows i'm looking for more to carry with me....probably the one single item i replace most often

    a little vaseline rubbed on them goes a long way to keep them from getting brittle and/or keeping a good seal if they're worn and you dont have any

    just another one of those things they don't teach you in school hahaha
     
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  7. jbatmick

    jbatmick Road Train Member

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    hastings, Fl
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    That is what I mean when I tell these new wannebee's that the older hands had more background to prepare them for trucking. These new guys have no mechanical knowledge:Wrench:, few abilities:smt102, and some have little common sense:smt096. They are clueless at times.
    Some of the school graduates get upset :violent1:when we try to explain trucking is a lot more than holding a steering wheel:biggrin_25510:.
     
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  8. FLATBED

    FLATBED Road Train Member

    All so very very true , all my trucks have the required spares ( belts , lights , fuses , glad hand rubbers ) and the drivers know how to use them and are compensated for carrying out the small repairs , not asking them to do an inframe during their 34 hr reset .
     
  9. Powder Joints

    Powder Joints Subjective Prognosticator

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    Rosamond, SoCal
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    Brake chambers and differentials are a bad gauge as they are directly over an axle and do not get closer to the ground when you go in and out of driveways or traintracks.

    Crank them all the way up, the higher the better.I do not believe there is an actual regulation, more of common sense. If they are to low and a cop sees you scrape the road you certainly will have a bad day. Or worse you rip them off or bend them back. You will bewarded with a chance to find a new employer.
     
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  10. 25(2)+2

    25(2)+2 Trucker Forum STAFF Staff Member

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    Some crank higher than others, even on the same type of trailer. There is a place we go where they often scrape, it's just the way the clearance is there.

    When I go there,I slide the tandems way up as that lessens the amount of drop off, but the Great Danes we pull scrape more than the Utility trailers, everything else was sold, so I don't know about those.

    One time, I got there early, and there was a tractor unhooked from the trailer, he called the company for a wrecker and was complaining about the trailer that his company had purchased when buying out another company.

    He hooked up and backed it in and when he left, darned near got stuck again.

    It may depend on where you are at, but I have ever seen action other than warning truckers to avoid getting hung up on odd off cambers and tall bumps next to holes. Getting stuck under a bridge is more of a worry where I go most often. The lowboy trailers getting hung up is more likely than a landing gear catching.
     
  11. 4seasons

    4seasons Light Load Member

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    Jul 1, 2009
    Greeneville, TN
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    I used to pull a lowboy trailer that only sat 2 inches off the ground. You just have to pay close attention to anything that may get you hung. I have also pulled a container a few times that only had a 3-4 inches of landing gear clearance when hooked to the old Pete that we used on the yard. You just have to pay closer attention to rises and humps and when crossing railroad tracks.
     
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