No food! No water or bathroom and expected to stay in truck

Discussion in 'Swift' started by bluebonn, Jan 16, 2011.

  1. Big Frank

    Big Frank Bobtail Member

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    Interesting thread, very informative. I thank you and all the others that document the ups and downs of the industry, good and bad.

    Be safe out there and keep the info coming.
     
    bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
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  3. ironpony

    ironpony Road Train Member

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    Hey bluebonn... bad place to have a logbook snafu. OR and WA are all over that sort of stuff. Make sure your times are accurate - they log when you pass the weigh stations, then pull you in down the line and check you on it.
     
  4. Injun

    Injun Road Train Member

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    Oregon will check Prepass against other states as well. Even though they do not use
    Prepass. They're on Norpass. But you get pinged by their scales even if you're on Prepass.
     
  5. scottied67

    scottied67 Road Train Member

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    Lifted from Norpass website:

    Who sees the information collected at the weigh station and how is it used?

    NORPASS is designed to improve the efficiency and safety of motor carrier operations, not to act as a data collection and distribution system. NORPASS member states agree to use the information collected by NORPASS solely for the purpose of determining each truck's bypass status.

    That sounds pretty harmless but if you read into it, it's really invasive. They can clock you from one Norpass site to the next and determine your speed.
    There plan is really attractive, just a one time fee of $45 for the transponder, that's it! They figure you will save $8.68 per bypass. But if you were clocked at 56 miles per hour in Oregon, it would take an awful lot of those bypasses to break even on the ticket.
     
  6. Injun

    Injun Road Train Member

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    Scottie, you get it. But Oregon also tracks Prepass even though it does not use it.
     
  7. bluebonn

    bluebonn Road Train Member

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    Seemed to be much easier driving back in the 90's when companies did not worry about your log book. That was your responsibility! If you screwed up and got caught then you paid the ticket.

    Now it's totally different and everybody has an eyeball on you. I just messed up on my log. I actually took the 34 but somehow only showed 33 hours.

    Lesson learned... next time I check real good before I move..
     
    scottied67 Thanks this.
  8. BigShrek72

    BigShrek72 Light Load Member

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    Just wait another couple of years when its all electronic logs.
     
  9. Lady K

    Lady K Road Train Member

    Hubby did that during the time change - totally frustrating!! Missed it by <__> this much!!
     
  10. ironpony

    ironpony Road Train Member

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    No worries... the computer takes care of all of those pesky little details... 33 vs 34 hours, time changes. DOT bears don't want to even mess with dealing with a log book violation - its a free pass at the scales. All you have to do is manage your hours.
     
    scottied67 Thanks this.
  11. inkeper

    inkeper Road Train Member

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    I got stopped for a level 3 on I-45 about 20 miles south of Dallas last night. He briefly checked D/L and wants and such, but spent nearly 30 minutes going over my logs. I think he was disappointed that he couldn't find any violations.
     
    scottied67 Thanks this.
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