I differ with this, it isn't the manufacturer who is on the hook, it is the carrier. The driver has to maintain the logs as I described and the carrier has to get the unit fixed by any means within 8 days of notification of the driver. The manufacturer is off the hook for it unless there is an issue with unit being defective and falling out of compliance.
If the ELD breaks?
Discussion in 'ELD Forum | Questions, Answers and Reviews' started by cd066, Aug 21, 2017.
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Has anyone heard of FedEx or UPS ? They can ship things overnight !! Yes they put your box on airplane and can get it to almost anyplace overnight. Ha ha
CrappieJunkie Thanks this. -
mhyn Thanks this.
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...so if you overnight it on Fedex and it ends up in a ditch, does the insurance on the shipment cover your downtime when it doesn't arrive in time?
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If you're that worried about Fed Ex wrecking and leaving you stranded at home without a working elog program.
You'll be fine. -
BTW I have checked Pilots and Loves two weeks ago and no ELD staff was on shelves..
Jeck Thanks this. -
If Swift and Werner can figure out the elog systems then surely everyone else can.
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Swift and Werner have a spare dozen or 10 (dozen) in each of their terminals. They will just route the truck to the nearest terminal and pull on hand stock.
Are you saying that is a realistic option for the average o/o?25(2)+2 Thanks this. -
If I owned a truck that wouldn't start without a toony sensor, and it took 6 days to order and receive a new toony sensor, I would carry a spare toony sensor.
But most electric devices are super extremely durable these days.
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