![]()
![]()
Another example of a white Volvo and we can figure out who’s driving that one. It’s pretty easy just passed the rest area near happy Jack Road in Wyoming is sitting on the shoulder for obviously no good reason and decides to not only not drive down the shoulder to pick up speed, but pull right out from a dead stop Cause me to sit there and make an evasive maneuver to avoid running into the idiot… This is why I have a camera in my truck
Getting Back on the Road from the Shoulder....
Discussion in 'Trucking Accidents' started by scottied67, Aug 4, 2025 at 10:27 PM.
Page 4 of 4
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
So you know what that truck is going to do before you get there. Make the evasive move before you get there then. Or just stay hard headed and in the lane because you want to win right? What's the prize? Too much trouble to move over? You first right? Gonna show him? For what? Who cares? Two bad habits on display doesn't make you right. Move over for dummy and go on with your life without losing any sleep over it.
Deere hunter Thanks this. -
-
tarmadilo Thanks this.
-
Deere hunter, scottied67 and D.Tibbitt Thank this.
-
I do think a lot more drivers are parking on the shoulder for their breaks, #1, it is monkey see monkey do like, they see everyone else doing it and so they do it too, but also #2, some states forbid parking on an on/off ramp or at the weigh station, so drivers have figured out that it is less illegal to park on the shoulder and still be able to max out their 11 hour drive clocks. Dispatchers and Planners expect drivers to run the full 11 hour nut every shift.
If we go back to the origin of the 11th hour, it was never meant to be used a production driving hour; the intent was a driver would max out their 10 hour drive clocks then use the 11th hour to find legal parking.
The advent of electronic logs, dispatchers pushing for that 11th hour of production driving, competition from all the low rate mega carriers, and even the automatic transmission that has taken over, the actual pace of trucking has changed in the last 10 years.
When we were on paper logs, there wasn't this full speed rush to accelerate everywhere you went, especially in truck stops. Plus the manual transmission, when shifted smoothly and properly, had a certain measured pace as you worked up through the gears. You might get up to third gear in the truck stop and ease back out to the highway, under little pressure because you moved the line on the paper logs to build in some slack time so it wouldn't penalize your clocks.
Now, drivers just put the transmission in D and press the go pedal to the floor everywhere they go especially racing through truck stops, because the ELD is ticking constantly. They go til the clock says stop and park where ever that might be even on the shoulder of the interstate. When it is time to go they count on the courtesy of other traffic to move over to the next lane to let them back onto the highway. They get away with it day after day over and over til something like what I saw, a driver going about 77 miles per hour had no out and lost his life for no good reason.Last edited: Aug 6, 2025 at 4:20 AM
D.Tibbitt Thanks this.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 4 of 4