Now understand the most important thing if you mess up is to keep trying until you get it down pat. To many drivers give up because they get a violation. The violation is there so we/log auditors should show you what you did wrong so you know how to do it the next time.
DOT wants you to be trained the correct way. The companies shouldn't be terminating you right of the bat because you mess up. That's the last resort and that's why companies are supposed to have a corrective action program for log violations.
Good luck!
Give me some examples of your log sheets and I will let you know if you did it right or wrong and if wrong I will let you know what you did wrong! But I need log grid details from your last full 10 hour break.
So you would
line 4: 12:00 to 12:15 pm
Line 3: 12:15 to 1:00 pm
and so on or a picture of the log grid is even better![]()
Hours of service questions and answers
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by LogsRus, Oct 26, 2008.
Page 2 of 75
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
Can you post file in a "Apple friendly" manner?
Thanks. I struggle with logs all the time. Any help will be great -
Found a APP to open this file
Thanks -
Great because no I didn't know how
I am going to be posting a new way of calculating when your 11 & 14 hour restarts after your 2nd break.
I have it just gotta post it and tweek it a little.
That's on split breaking!
Remember once you start working (lines 3 or 4) that starts your 14 hour clock. Count over 14 hours and make a mark! There is no REASON WHAT SO EVER for you to drive passed that 14 hour mark UNLESS you want to split break! If you split break remember one key thing! You must have 8 hours in the SLEEPER to extend the 14 hour clock.
If you stop for 7.75 hours and sleep during your 14 hour you will still need to shut down # the end of your 14 hour.Lady K and pinballwizard Thank this. -
G-3. How does a driver who is utilizing the sleeper berth provision calculate his or her compliance with the 14-hour rule?
A sleeper-berth period of at least 8 consecutive hours is excluded from calculation of the 14-hour limitation. All other sleeper berth periods are included in the 14-hour calculation (unless part of a sleeper-berth/off-duty combination of 10 or more consecutive hourspinballwizard Thanks this. -
To wit: Driver starts at 08:00, thus their 14-hours ends at 22:00. However, they choose to take eight-hours in the sleeper berth at 18:00, thus their 14-hours does not expire until 06:00 the second day. So long as the driver still has any portion of the allowed 11-hours driving still available, they may drive past 22:00 on the first day. Of course the driver must take the remaining two-hours of their 10-hour rest period no later than 06:00 of the second day. Then their 14/11 starts all over.Half a Load and pinballwizard Thank this. -
pinballwizard Thanks this.
-
The two hours does not extend the 14 hours, the eight hours does. As you will notice, I indicated taking the two hours, beginning no later than 06:00 the following day. As the 14 hours is "extended", so is the 11 (assuming the driver hasn't already driven 11 hours). There is no adding of time, only moving the clock.
The 14 hours only applys to the time within which your 11 hours of driving must occur. You can work as many hours as you like ... 40 hours straight for all the FMCSA cares (so long as you get your 10 hours rest before driving again, assuming you've still got some of your 70 hours available too) Which then leads into the question of; if the split (which I have been informed is no longer the correct term, but it's a lot easier to use) only extends the 14, but not the 11 then it would be a superfluous provision and comletely unnecessary.
There is no requirement to utilize a 34-hour reset before utilizing the split-break.
Did you even read the document posted in the OP? If you had, you wouldn't have posted what you did.Last edited: Dec 9, 2008
pinballwizard and Half a Load Thank this. -
-
Half a Load and pinballwizard Thank this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 2 of 75