Front axle weight

Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by mitmaks, Jun 6, 2016.

  1. MACK E-6

    MACK E-6 Moderator Staff Member

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    I can believe that. Mixers are unstable as it is.
     
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  3. rbrtwbstr

    rbrtwbstr Road Train Member

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    A little off topic here, but you know what's really sad? Around my area, mixer drivers generally start out at only 12.50 an hour. Sheetz, on the other hand, starts their store employees out at the same rate. Which job has more risk?

    Crazy, isn't it?
     
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  4. okiedokie

    okiedokie Road Train Member

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    The super singles don't like wet or slick roads. They have less traction than duals and suck to chain. Up here we run them on other axles besides steers.
     
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  5. Dave_in_AZ

    Dave_in_AZ Road Train Member

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    We were at $20 + $1.70 pension when I left, non union side, which are 2 giant companies, we're closer to $23, go figure. The kids that were green , some started at like half scale. Usually an experienced driver new to Redi Mix would be at $16 or $17 and get scale in a year.


    LOL I used to drift around the plant to the staging area.
     
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  6. Bdog

    Bdog Road Train Member

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    http://www.in.gov/isp/files/size_weight_laws.pdf
    Here is a link to a summary of Indiana size and weight laws. I don't see anything in there about being limited to a 12k steer. Not saying there isn't a law about it somewhere but I don't see it mentioned in this document.
     
  7. Dave_in_AZ

    Dave_in_AZ Road Train Member

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    Look at your motor carrier atlas.
     
  8. Cowpie1

    Cowpie1 Road Train Member

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    Those are the true definition of "super singles". Those bigger single steer tires on stuff that sees serious loading or off road. The single tires on road truck drive axles are technically called "wide based".
     
  9. Moose1958

    Moose1958 Road Train Member

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    Actually that is wrong. Weight limits are based on different locations and roadways. All you have to do is get a motor carrier road atlas and look at the tables. Some states go by tire rating some go by a weight limit and some go by whichever is greater or lesser. If you don't have an atlas google state weight limits on steer tires and you will see several states limits.
     
  10. Cowpie1

    Cowpie1 Road Train Member

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    True, limits are based on state determinations according to road, but they do place limits on the rating of the axle and the tires being used. RM atlas just shows maximum for the roads. I can pretty much guarantee you that if you roll across the scale with 15,000 lb on a standard steer axle and tires most OTR trucks are running, even if the state max is 20,000 lb on a steer, you are getting pulled around back and taken out of service.
     
  11. Moose1958

    Moose1958 Road Train Member

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    Not in a state that has no max tire rating law. According to my guide the state of Alabama had a max 20,000 for steers with no @ in it limiting to tire rating or thread width. My guide is 3 years old so this might have changed.

    Here is a link to a 2013 weight guide.

    www.fischertrucking.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/06/SizeWeight13.pdf
     
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