Always has been a regulation for it. No need to re-invent the wheel. Just like a pull behind trailer that only has 1 tire per side, if it is flat it is out of service. If a super single is flat, 50% below the maximum allowed pressure as marked on the sidewall that vehicle is out of service until the tire is repaired.
Just some of the stupid things I see
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by dieselbear, Jan 31, 2010.
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Mastertech Staff Leader / Admin Staff Member Administrator
This is the last warning we are posting in here. Once again we have removed posts from this thread and cleaned it up, if the bickering starts again we will ban the people involved. There is no reason we can't have a conversation without the bickering.
Last edited: Sep 11, 2011
Lilbit, Brickman, American-Trucker and 11 others Thank this. -
This is where I have a problem with the regulations. I run 11R24.5 LRH drive tires. The maximum allowed pressure marked on the sidewalls is 120 psi, however according to Michelin's load & pressure chart, if I were running 39K on my drives (5K overweight), the recommended pressure is only 75 psi. If I am running a "legal" load, the recommended pressure is even lower. 800 pounds per axle (1600/tandem) increases the recommended pressure by 5 psi in the recommendation chart...so doing the math, that's roughly 15 psi less, or 60 psi. In other words, running at the manufacturer's recommended pressure for a tire at the legal maximum load, I can be placed out of service for having a flat tire because it is only inflated to 50% of the MAXIMUM pressure for the MAXIMUM load as marked on the sidewall of the tire. If you want me running 120 psi in my tires, I should be allowed to carry 52,880 pounds on my drives....because THAT is what the 120 psi is recommended for.lostNfound Thanks this. -
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You said:
OK, how about:
If you blow a tire a couple of miles down the road and pull in here to the scalehouse, you may get DOT'd and the flat recorded on the inspection, but you will not be ticketed by me.
However, if the tire blew or you knew it was flat/low several towns, or states, from the scalehouse, then you passed a lot of "safe places" (towns, exit ramps, etc.) and are likely to be ticketed.Injun, dieselbear and zebcohobo Thank this. -
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Kaji, he's not saying we have to log time for it. Only flag it, as said before.
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bullhaulerswife Thanks this.
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I haven't always noted times. Your guidance says may be noted, not must be noted. Therefore, it is not required.
Hammer166 Thanks this.
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