At roadside inspection, law enforcement cannot request logs more than 7 days prior to the current day (full 8 day record), even if your ELD system has the capability to show information prior to that. However, a DOT auditor can look at logs going back 6 months, so technically if law enforcement has reason to believe there are issues prior to the current legal visibility, theoretically he could flag your DOT number as suspect for further follow up for an audit. Practically speaking, this is not likely to happen.
Is there a "BUFFER" to get to the next truck stop when the driving as no more hours ?
Discussion in 'ELD Forum | Questions, Answers and Reviews' started by Sunandshine, Jan 24, 2018.
Page 6 of 11
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
-
I worked for a company that got audited by DOT, local/regional work and drivers were on the company clock for local work and putting off duty on log book so when they did regional miles they had more hours.
The DOT punished the company not the drivers. The company proceeded to make drivers use a timeclock on the wall, ELD and 2 paper time logs. 4 ways of logging, everyday.
That ridiculous amount of time logging is why I left, I don't handle redundancy well.
But yea, company was forced to come up with a system that drivers couldn't cheat, but the dot didn't go after every driver, they all did it. -
-
The only buffer you have on your logs is that 3 hour window from 11 driving hours to 14 on duty hours. Gotta get three job done in that timeframe
-
Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
-
adjective: laden
heavily loaded or weighed down.
"a tree laden with apples"
synonyms: loaded, burdened, weighed down, encumbered, overloaded, piled high, fully charged;
full, filled, packed, stuffed, crammed;
Doesn't sound like an empty applies.
But you are currect under current guidance it's not really clear.
Good thing is, new guidance is around the corner that changes it to even laden ok, just can't be advancing the load.Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
scottied67 Thanks this. -
Have you guys ever had to go in the direction OPPOSITE your next pickup or delivery to find a place to sleep? I had to do that once and noticed it was chewing up my drive time even though I was going the opposite way I needed to go. It wasn't much but I figured it wasn't real fair to eat my drive time because all the truck stops near my delivery were full. I had to take off OUT of the city and go find a place.Last edited: Feb 9, 2018
-
And your answer is to "leave it" Are you being serious????
And the very moment you leave. The receiver calls a tow truck and has your trailer impounded.
Show me any O/O who would just leave an investment like that at a shipper or a receiver, and I'll be glad to show you a fool. -
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 6 of 11