Zero chance of that happening. Way to much liability in shutting down a truck remotely, even if you tied the ignition into the elogs. As it stands none of them have that access, they are read only.
Question about elogs
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Justonelittlezerg, Feb 9, 2018.
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Regulations Section
Question 26: If a driver is permitted to use a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) for personal reasons, how must the driving time be recorded?
Guidance:
a driver is relieved from work and all responsibility for performing work, time spent traveling from a driver’s home to his/her terminal (normal work reporting location), or from a driver’s terminal to his/her home, may be considered off-duty time. Similarly, time spent traveling short distances from a driver’s en route lodgings (such as en route terminals or motels) to restaurants in the vicinity of such lodgings may be considered off-duty time. The type of conveyance used from the terminal to the driver’s home, from the driver’s home to the terminal, or to restaurants in the vicinity of en route lodgings would not alter the situation unless the vehicle is laden. A driver may not operate a laden CMV as a personal conveyance. The driver who uses a motor carrier’s Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) for transportation home, and is subsequently called by the employing carrier and is then dispatched from home, would be on-duty from the time the driver leaves home.
A driver placed out of service for exceeding the requirements of the hours of service regulations may not drive a Commercial Motor Vehicle (CMV) to any location to obtain rest. -
Let's be clear, you aren't using the truck for personal reasons if you are moving it from the customer to the truck stop. The customer is demanding that you remove the truck and trailer from the property, you are moving it to legal and safe parking, that's relocating equipment. That's not PC.
ZVar Thanks this. -
misterG Thanks this.
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Seems to me that the PC allowance, is clear as the Mississippi in Mississippi. Use it, IF you get stopped, be up front with the LEO. Let them know what happened.
All you're going to get here is a bunch of mud, unladen means many things to many people.nax Thanks this. -
Sure, you might be able to convince a cop otherwise, but the simple fact is that using PC in that manner is a violation of the rules as written, and using an off duty status when you are performing work for the company (moving their truck to a legal parking space) is log falsification. -
I use PC to get from a customer to legal parking constantly and it is always to shower or feed my person, hence Personal Conveyance. The fact that company equipment happens to tag along is purely incidental and nothing at all to do with my choosing to move.tinytim, misterG and scottied67 Thank this. -
There is no 'duty' when the unit is unladen and no dispatch. Just because someone says you have to move off our property is not doing work or duty for them.
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Although it's not specified in the guidance I can tell you that from personal conversations with law enforcement.
That.
1( dot / fmcsa considers a tractor pulling a trailer laden with the trailer.
2( leaving the customer after being unloaded is a continuation of that trip.
3( spoke to a few scalemasters that have said if you get pulled in with a trailer and you trying to claim PC your getting cited because of # 1.
I wouldn't go on what a specific company is letting you get away with in reguards to using PC. Cya baby.
Don't shoot the messenger just telling ya what was said to me.
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