Ah, didn't realize that this forum was a criticism "safe zone" and that stating that things drivers should know should have been covered in school/orientation/training. I'll only criticize those nasty evil megas and bottom feeder companies for not having adequate training and forcing these poor drivers (who can't deal with being criticized) onto internet forums to find out things they should have already learned, and of course those evil companies have no one at all these drivers can call to ask questions. Bad bad company.
Read the above with heavy sarcasm.
weight limits?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Tonyd32, Dec 8, 2015.
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Have a nice day.Dumdriver, clausland, austinmike and 3 others Thank this. -
It's your job to know the limits of both your equipment and the roads you're travelling. -
It's a sad day when a new drivers are forced underground to find information. They stay behind waiting for someone else to ask the questions because they do not want to be ridiculed. Most drivers here with experience will do what is expected and teach and pass down information that driver may have. We know it's our job to continue to teach just as we know it's the drivers job to learn. Any driver that believes they know it all is no driver to me. In fact, I consider those types as hazardous. So as far as I'm concerned this type of behavior needs to be stopped and it does not take any more energy to answer a simple question than it does to criticize.
I'm sorry if I came off too strong but I would rather have someone ask me a question than for someone to say avoid that driver because he knows it all. It has never happen to me because I came out of the military and there you teach the younger to do your job as I was taught to learn the job above me. If any one feels they can not ask this site a question Please PM me and I promise I'll never ridicule anyone for asking a question. And if I do not know the answer I will tell you that. But I'll give you where to find the answer and we'll both search for it.Dumdriver, Diesel Dave, PeteyFixAll and 6 others Thank this. -
Second, trainers work for the company. If the company hauls nothing but toilet paper or empty cans to the cannery, there is absolutely no need to train a new driver on weights. Same with some bulk operations. No need to scale, because you can't be over if you tried.
We never have our drivers scale, because our loads simply can't run over gross, and we run at 86,000 every trip. If I train a driver for our operation, weights only come up as far as going up hill and down hill.Bob Dobalina and Dumdriver Thank this. -
Dumdriver and Bob Dobalina Thank this.
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First, the PSP is your CSA score, the only points that can be added to that are as a result of an inspection. Just a citation without an accompanying inspection will not show.
Also, and I am not 100% sure, but I thought I had heard overweight is not one of the BASIC's so it would go on there. I could be wrong on that though.
Also almost every State allows an extra 400 lbs if your truck has an APU, but it needs to be carried on the drives, making the limit there 34,400 with an APU.
Also I believe only Indiana and Mississippi limit the steers to 12k, many do not have a set limit, some are up to 20k, and some are done by so many lbs per inch, in any case you can not be above the tires rated weight.GarlicBreadBandit Thanks this. -
KMac Thanks this.
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People complain left and right about todays companies not training, or todays drivers can't drive...yet when an inexperienced driver actually has the common sense to ask, to learn, to try to be a better driver, some drivers dog pile on him...to me, those dog pile drivers are no better than the trainer that doesn't teach their trainee's properly. The OP asked a question, and asked for our assistance...don't be a dog pile, or perhaps he may not ask the next time and won't learn a darn thing, and won't be any better than he is today.
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