Key word supposedly lol. Until the "empty" has all of the irregs thrown on the tail. There is no point in trying to figure it out there, you just hook em and roll.
Wiggle wagons
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Bodhiknight, Nov 2, 2019.
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A full load of class 50 freight wouldn’t come close to cubing out a pup, while class 300 freight most certainly would at about 10% of the weight.FlaSwampRat and D.Tibbitt Thank this. -
Overnights thru the I-40 gorge in NC there are fedex doubles who i cant even come close to hanging with, and ive raced most things on wheels. Some of those dudes could teach nascar whats up.
Bodhiknight and FlaSwampRat Thank this. -
Snow Monster and FlaSwampRat Thank this.
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Now, while I'm still here, I have a question about pinning turntables. How can you turn with the turntable on the tail trailer pinned? Or is it more like get the set lined up, pin the turntable, then straight back?
I'm still stuck on C dollies, I guess...I would really just prefer a B-train but don't think they quite fly in the US's regulatory scheme. C dolly seems as if it would operate very similarly, but still be a "convertor dolly" that can be separated from the set. -
Do you have a suspension air gauge for your tractor suspension? Hook up to each trailer individually and you'll know which one is heavier.
joshlilou Thanks this. -
If you're backing them up and need to turn sharply the converter tires will skid rather than steer, not so much when loaded.
You need to talk to your lawmakers about making B trains a reality in the USA, if only because they don't wiggle, unless you want them to, (safer), plus there's so much less dickin around to hook 2 or 3 or them together and still be able to back them up.
Even docking them is easier.
Back the whole rig to the dock, drop the pup, line the lead up with it's door, pull a lever, the suspension and 5th slide under the trailer, back it to the dock, unhook the lead and onto to the next task.
Actually, US lawmakers should have been on the case 40 years ago, you're way behind the times! -
B trains are legal, at least in a lot of states, the problem is they will not bridge the weight, at least here. They are actually even legal on roads a regular set of doubles are not here.
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I don't want them for weight, I want them for deck space. Looking at some lightweight hauls... A set of 28's gives me 56 feet of deck, as opposed to the usual 48 or 53 flats. Don't need more than 28 feet of continuous space.
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Are regular doubles legal there?
I have never been around a b train with just a 28 foot lead trailer, if they are available, I would think they are at least legal anywhere a set of short doubles are. I am sure not a lawyer though.
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