It has generally been done for as long as I can remember... I started driving in 1993, and when I went to driving school they taught us to do it. I believe it was even required on the CDL test (though I had a third-party tester, and he didnt even test backing).
Its a courtesy thing, a safety thing. In a shipping dock, I would tap the air horn a couple of times. In a terminal or truck stop, a couple of beeps of the city horn. That way anyone around me knew I was backing.
backing
Discussion in 'Swift' started by red S-10, Mar 31, 2011.
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Oh noes please do not put the backup alarms on the trucks!! I will be killed late at night in a truckstop by other drivers!
One just pulled up beside me and that alarm was loud as hell!!! I like the helmet idea that was mentioned on a earlier post. I would rather look stupid wearing a backup alarm helmet than waking up all the tired drivers late at night.
Those alarms are way too loud!!!! -
Backup alarms belong on construction equipment and maybe some day cabs, but not on otr trucks. Im getting tired of getting woke up at a TS by some guys back up alarm.
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i was in houston tx. a couple of days ago picking up at goodman manf. and i could tell that we pick up there alot because above the shipping and recieving door was a sign that said "drivers please minimize the use of your horn please think of others.
Injun and scottied67 Thank this. -
i do it at a terminal and thats it. the reason for the new rule is a mentor pinned one of his students between the trailer and dock
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