Again that was only an example. Someone might feel they're a safe driver. But really they've only been lucky.
Your two threads are things I learned the answer to in my first 90 Days of having my CDL.
Perhaps you might ask your safety department for some refresher training.
Maybe my opinion is skewed due to a really good training department at Stevens Transport and other companies don't go to the lengths they do. To create safe and well trained drivers. So drivers like you are left in the wind. Trying to figure it out for themselves.
If so. I apologize.
Tandem placement and turning radius
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by expedite_it, Jan 22, 2022.
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I never asked for your opinion on my driving ability. The thread is not supposed to be about me. The thread is about trailer swing, turning radius, and offsetting. -
Sliding your tandem forward or back is what affects your maneuverability. Too far forward and tail swing can become a problem if you don’t allow enough room on your sides. You’ll basically need a straight line to get in and out of any place.expedite_it Thanks this. -
Graduate high school?InTooDeep, Long FLD and God prefers Diesels Thank this. -
You said that the tail swing is never a benefit. So that means that you don't think that tail swing to the right is how sliding the tandems forward helped me get the rear of the trailer past the guard shack. You are saying that sliding the tandems forward helped me by increased maneuverability. So as far as my question in post #60 goes, did I get this increased maneuverability by reducing off-tracking? -
I don't see how you figure the trailer swung right if you shortened the tandem while in a left turn. The tail would swing left as you backed up.InTooDeep and expedite_it Thank this. -
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MACK E-6 Thanks this.
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I do have a better understanding of the scenario in the OP now. However, I still don't understand everything about the scenario of the OP 100%. I still don't know if what FLD wrote in post #61 is correct.
I will write what FLD wrote in green text. FLD wrote the following in post #61: "Good lord…sliding your tandems ahead makes it akin to pulling a shorter trailer. The same with any trailer, once the tires get past the obstacle you’re good to go. ."
I don't know if what FLD wrote here is correct. FLD says that once the tires get past the obstacle, you're good to go. Now, I know that usually, once you get past the tandems, you are good to go because even with the tandems all the way forward, the center point of the tandems is still only about 8 or 10 feet maximum from the rear of the trailer. But FLD makes it sound like getting the tandems past the obstacle is the decisive factor, which I don't understand. Wouldn't it be possible to hit the trailer against the guard shack at a point on the trailer behind the tandems?
Do you agree with FLD on post #61? If so, why are the tandems the decisive factor?
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