Hi...I'm a fairly new driver and yet to drive in California. I'm confused about the 40' mark. If the weight of the load is over 38,000 you want to distribute the weight properly, but if Its under 38000 you must set tandems to 40'? Is this right? because surely they don't want you to set at 40' at all times because sometimes that would make you overweight on your drives or tandems, right?
Confused about California law
Discussion in 'Trucking Industry Regulations' started by Jdm5jdm5, Apr 13, 2016.
Page 1 of 6
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
CA must be at 40' mark or shorter and legal for all axles NO MATTER what the weight is.
rabbiporkchop, Dominick253, flood and 1 other person Thank this. -
U can't go more than 40 so that mean u have to be legal at 40
rabbiporkchop, Dominick253 and Jdm5jdm5 Thank this. -
I was empty ànd they made me move 1 hole because I was over 40
rabbiporkchop and Jdm5jdm5 Thank this. -
OK. I've never measured a mark from the kingpin. Is there a certain way to get a precise measeurement, it seems like it would be a pain to keep a tape measure hooked to the kingpin and pull to your tandems. Should I measure when the trailer is unhooked from my truck?
-
Typical 53 foot dryvan and reefer have 3 foot kingpin from front of trailer. That leaves a balance of 50 feet back to the rear of the trailer. What most of us do is measure from the back of the trailer 10 feet forward and make a mark, rear axle cannot be past that mark. But yes if you want to be truly accurate, drop a plumb bob from the center of the kingpin to the ground, make a mark, measure 40 feet off that and plumb bob it back up to the bottom of the trailer and square using the Egyptian method of 3,4,5 to bring a true accurate mark out to the outside of the trailer.
Dominick253, 91B20H8 and Jdm5jdm5 Thank this. -
Some trailer has marking on it too that say "cal" or "cali" for the right pin setting
Dominick253 and Jdm5jdm5 Thank this. -
OK. So basically once they load me, I'll set the tandems at 40 feet, go straight to the closest scale and weigh. If the weight isn't good then the shipper will have to reload me?
-
It's 34,000 lbs maximum weight on both, drive axles and tandems. Not 38,000
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 1 of 6