Log question
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by flwo, Oct 27, 2014.
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You don't have to flag anything other than the time you start and the time you finish, as long as you end your day within 12 hours and stay inside the 100 air-mile radius. Entire day goes on line 4. Don't even have to show a 30 minute break...just time you start, time you end, total hours worked, the date, and your name.
flwo Thanks this. -
Ha why are you guys stressing over all this?
I am not saying what to do, but if I was in that situation I would not even bother to go on duty in the first place.
Do everything you can to show DOT has no control over you!flwo Thanks this. -
But what would happen if a drunk hits the truck, on the .2 miles down the road.. we timed it, to take a truck, hook to a trailer, drive to our warehouse .2 miles away, drop it, pick up an empty, bring it back, takes less than 15...
if we note #4, then wouldn't we be cited for falsifying logs?
if they put a bridge over the darn creek, we'd stay on our own freakin' property.... that is how close the 2 warehouses are to each other. -
can you show me where in fmcsa regs? -
flwo Thanks this.
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I work local & regional. On the days I do local, I log my start time on duty not driving. At the end of the day, I figure how much time it took me to drive the tasks I had done that day. Then I make a block showing the amount of time I was on duty not driving & a block showing how much time I had driving. Then log myself off duty. I also show the miles I ran that day.
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I'm leased to a large chain of companies. They tell us to log local like I showed in the picture. Dot never questions it.
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Since OP said it was 2/10 of a mile I assumed it took only a minute or two to make the crossing. And the thing about logging all time in a city together even if there are a lot of duty changes was a rule change the FMCSA made for just that thing. City drivers doing lots of stops would have a heck of a time maintaining legibility with all the jumps from driving to on-duty back to driving. This method allows your log to be both legible and accurate.
25(2)+2 Thanks this. -
Another question about logging time:
I understand how to log time when crossing time zones; you maintain the time where home base is, and I understand that this only happens twice a year, but how do you represent the time change when dealing with Daylight Savings Time, either springing forward or falling back?
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