How to secure paper rolls to satisfy DOT?

Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by MrsWJAA, May 14, 2023.

  1. wis bang

    wis bang Road Train Member

    3,388
    3,984
    Jan 12, 2011
    Levittown, PA
    0
    That's why J B sold his tankers; too many drownings when installing load locks!
     
  2. Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.

  3. wis bang

    wis bang Road Train Member

    3,388
    3,984
    Jan 12, 2011
    Levittown, PA
    0
    Right after they started talking about securement; The carrier I was with had a container stopped after leaving the shipper; DOT was looking to see how that shipper had secured the product. Resealed and on to the pier and customs with no proiblems.
     
    Cattleman84, MrsWJAA and tscottme Thank this.
  4. Star Rider

    Star Rider Road Train Member

    1,487
    12,211
    Sep 23, 2019
    Michigan
    0
    Load securement is important, even when hauling livestock.



    upload_2023-5-15_14-4-0.jpeg
     
    Cattleman84, JoeyJunk, Numb and 5 others Thank this.
  5. Frank Speak

    Frank Speak Road Train Member

    4,519
    13,817
    May 3, 2016
    0
    I’ve witnessed Florida DOT open sealed reefer trailers before.
     
  6. Kshaw0960

    Kshaw0960 Road Train Member

    1,581
    5,023
    Jun 17, 2018
    0
    DOT won’t break seals during an inspection. They technically can, but it never happens. Usually only police or border patrol if you give permission or a drug dog alerts.

    Secondly, I worked for international paper for 5 years and I’ve had big paper rolls slide forward once. Car cut me off and I had to hit the brakes a little hard. Rolls slide forward and busted the rivets about 2’ long on the bottom of the wall and bowed outward about 3”
     
    Numb, MrsWJAA and Siinman Thank this.
  7. kemosabi49

    kemosabi49 Trucker Forum STAFF Staff Member

    10,627
    45,504
    Jan 13, 2013
    SW Arkansas
    0
    I saw a bug cop break a seal in California on a reefer at the bughouse at Needles. Opened my trailer too though I didn't have it sealed. Told me they were checking all of the loads coming out of Texas for fire ants.
     
    MrsWJAA and Frank Speak Thank this.
  8. mstrchf117

    mstrchf117 Medium Load Member

    633
    1,436
    May 21, 2016
    0
    Last company I hauled a fair number of paper loads from different places. Didn't seem to be any sort of standard for securement. Some used those gravity mats I think, they looked like shingles. Some had me put straps in. One nailed boards down. I think one place used sand or sawdust, though may be thinking of a different customer. One time I hauled rolls in a reefer, just used a bunch of load bars. Did any of this matter? Idk but never had a claim or anything.
     
    MrsWJAA Thanks this.
  9. 201

    201 Road Train Member

    12,286
    25,098
    Apr 16, 2014
    high plains colorado
    0
    Those mats are made of ground up tires, I think, and I took a bunch home. Worked better than cardboard.
     
    MrsWJAA, JoeyJunk and bzinger Thank this.
  10. silverspur

    silverspur Road Train Member

    1,651
    7,350
    Sep 26, 2012
    0
    I wouldn't haul them if they were that high and stacked in the middle with nothing to brace them. I would worry about hitting an S curve in a work zone and dumping it and killing someone.

    I have to have them loaded so they can't tip over and smash through the wall of the trailer.
     
    Last edited: May 17, 2023
  11. silverspur

    silverspur Road Train Member

    1,651
    7,350
    Sep 26, 2012
    0
    The only thing that prevents those companies from loading those paper rolls safe is GREED.

    They should be loaded like this, strapped, not on a flatbed, but see how these are tied down and on racks under them and it makes it harder to tip over:

    Screenshot_20230517-160303_Gallery.jpg
     
    Last edited: May 17, 2023
  • Truckers Report Jobs

    Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds

    Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.