I am a new O/O and I have received notice from my company that I lease my trailer from that it is due for an Upper Coupler Inspection, does anyone know if that is something I do myself or do I have to have it done somewhere? If it needs to be done somewhere, where would that be?
~thanks to anyone that can help
Upper coupler inspection question
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by GX2, Jun 29, 2014.
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GX2 Thanks this.
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Ok, you lease the trailer...... is that not their responsibility or....yours by contract? And a warning...FYI: If they disturb the bolts holding the plate then new ones must be added back. None of this BS "oh their fine"..... so watch them. In my tanker ops, we remove the plate, do inspection and bolt back up.
I'm not saying that's a requirement although I think it is ( have to ask my guy ) but it's a real good idea to not be deeking around in such a critical area.
JMOGX2 Thanks this. -
No, it's my obligation to maintain all inspection but getting a history on the equipment has seemingly been impossible and just starting out I'm trying to get a schedule together so I know when everything is due... And got a million things on my plate, but so far so good... I'm just a "planner" and don't do well with last min surprises... But after this lil shocker I'll be on my toes! Just don't know why they wouldn't have taken care of all that when it was coming up due right when I started my lease... At any rate thanks for the great advice I'll be sure to put it to use
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part of the inspection will involve a kingpin gauge. It's basically a plastic tool that will measure whether or not the king pin is perpendicular to the king section and will also check to see if the king section or wing plates are collapsing. It also checks for wear of the actual king pin. Then they will do a visual inspection on everything to check for cracks and/or rust/corrosion.
You should be visually checking the upper coupler every day as a part of the dvir, but I see a lot of drivers, who pull the same unit, who have not dropped their trailer since the last time they were in the shop.
I think I paid less than $30 for a kingpin gauge. Most people don't own one.
It is part of the annual DOT inspection. If it's a reputable shop, they are performing this step. If it's fleet maintenance, it's 50/50. If they are sending out notices, the are on the ball or at least covering their own.GX2 Thanks this. -
thank you to all the replies apparently they were confused and my trailer is not due for a upper coupler infection for 3 more years... gotta love the big people telling a little people what to do when they don't know what they're doing themselves :-/
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You must be a HM183 certified inspector to do the inspection on upper coupler and fill out proper paperwork.
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