It's on the Arkansas side as you're heading south into Memphis. He didn't say the scale was in Tennessee. Just that he went through Memphis.
Would you run with this weight like this?
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by prosidius, Nov 1, 2017.
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TripleSix Thanks this.
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spyder7723 Thanks this.
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Inform your company. Sometimes they will agree to take the hit in favor of on time delivery.
I picked up a dropped loaded trailer another driver brought in but was out of hours to deliver. He never scaled the load even though the shipper has certified scales and the Loves was only 5 miles from the shipper and company pays for CAT scales. Still this driver dropped the trailer at over 1500 pounds too heavy for the California 40 foot deal (California bound load).
I told the company and they swore up and down I can stretch out past 40 and if I get busted they will pay all fines/reworks whatever.
Farmerbob1 Thanks this. -
As far as being 800 lbs overt on the trailer. It's been a while since i had to deal with that in Tennessee but it used to be 2 cents per pound. That's 16 bucks. A lot cheaper than the axle length ticket.
If it was my truck is run it and risk the 16 dollar ticket. If it was a company truck is call them and ask what they wanted me to do.FullMetalJacket Thanks this. -
I just finished the run. I ended up getting the green light at the TN scale (which was open) so I didn't get stopped at all.
FullMetalJacket Thanks this. -
There is a shipper we have in northern VA that ships a lot into Texas. They have a penchant for loading trucks heavy on the rear. I've run numerous loads from there across TN and out to Dallas with the tandems "way back" to keep the axle weight in line. Never had any issues. But I have an angel that looks over me and keeps me out of trouble, I guess. Our trailers have foot markings on the side. I don't guess I've ever "counted holes".
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FullMetalJacket and scottied67 Thank this.
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They strung the tape out, “Well ####, this is a forty eight footer, ain’t it.”
LolFullMetalJacket, Farmerbob1, MACK E-6 and 6 others Thank this. -
Technicalities would suggest you run legal. What would the company do if you informed them the load isn't? The burden is always, always on the driver to make it right or don't pull it. The exception is to knowingly pull it over weight or overlength. The points from a written violation are not worth the time and money saved by avoiding State DOT regulations. Although you got lucky this time, next time tell the shipper in advance to load it like a 48 foot trailer or you will come back and have it reworked.
FullMetalJacket Thanks this.
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