Ok, so i've watched alot of videos here on youtube and tried finding answers aswell on the discussion forums and really can't seem to find a straight-forward answer to my question.
I wanted to know how some of you guys and gals go about setting your tandems when getting a load.
For example: You pick-up in Oregon from Utah, Where do you set your tandems? I know your not loaded yet but i would assume that doesn't matter because your crossing state lines which has it's own king-pin setting and where do you set once your loaded say heading from Oregon to Alabama? Do you always pre-set regardless of the state to the California setting if the load is weighed and your good gross and on your axles or, do you set it for the state your running through with the strictest setting just to get a little more lee-way on the distance so you have flexibility when trying to get legal. Thanks, all feedback on this question is greatly appreciated since i'm going to be starting with my company here in the coming weeks.
Tandem Setting Question
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Big B0y, Oct 3, 2015.
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I set trailer tandems as far forward as I can get them while A) Being legal on the trailer and B) getting the trailer within about 3-4k of the drives. I set them forward as far as I can to make my turning radius shorter and do B because if the trailer tandem is significantly heavier then the truck tandem you tend to get bounced around alot in the cab.
T_Bone Thanks this. -
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First figure out which state you're traveling thru is the most restrictive, that's the maximum you can go back.
Then you set the tandems as close to balanced as possible with the drives being up to 500.lbs heavier. That will give you the best ride with the best fuel economy.T_Bone Thanks this. -
T_Bone Thanks this.
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i delivered to downtown Boston, 2 stops, 5 nights a week.. my trailer is a 53 footer. you had better believe my tandems are all the way forward.
wish i could tell you about OTR, but when i did that, i had them as forward as possible (on average 15 holes from the rear) to make sure i was with-in limits. and i'd usually had my 5th wheel's pivot point in the middle of the drives. -
I don't have to worry about the Ca issue since I don't run there.
I set it to the load. I'll start at the 41' mark since that's usually where I end up at most of the time with the loads I carry but I like it to be as even as possible drives/tandems.
Certain loads over time I learn to set farther forward to get even weight.
Certain areas/customers I run/deliver I'll run it farther farther due to the location I'm going to be running in and/or known tight turns or docks/dock areas, weight not being an issue.
The only real answer is there isn't a one size fits all answer. -
merlinn Thanks this.
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8.5 ft from the back and you are legal everywhere I do believe. As far as weight 250lbs per hole. This works for my anyways except this week when I was to heavy on my drives and I was bridged all the way out and 3 pallets short of a full truck. Masonite idiots couldn't spread it out with that much room. I ended up 400 lbs over on my drives with no more holes left to adjust to. Typical drop and hook, if it was a beer run I would have found scales faster than a midnite concrete fiber fun.
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Post #5 pretty much says all that needs to be said. Get legal weight-wise first and hopefully you're pretty close to CA setting.
If you run heavy often, you'll probably run +/- 2 holes of a given position 95% of the time, as you tweak to keep trailer under 34k.
I don't like to run trailer tandems ALL the way forward, even empty, but find the "near CA setting" to be preferable in terms of ride comfort, backing reaction and minimal tail-swing.
As long as you're not "obviously way back" with the tandems, you're probably not going to run into scale house problems.
I saw a local daycab truck for a large LTL carrier running into local retail business area with a 53' trailer. Tandems were all the way to the rear. WTF? A lot of docks want tandems all the way back when loading/unloading, but it's not worth driving around with them there. This will get you into trouble sooner or later.flood Thanks this.
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