From overdrive.. Forgive me if Ive got Europe on the brain these days. Ill be spending a good portion of this month in Germany, on assignment, as the big-shot network journalists like to say. So its inevitable, I guess.
I was thinking this morning about my Autobahn blog from last week, particularly about the section recounting how trucks in Germany are strictly regulated to 55 mph. I got a chuckle thinking about the incandescent, boiling rage that would erupt in the States if somebody told truckers here they would be allowed to go 55 mph and no faster, ever. Trust me, I have many, many four-wheeler friends who would be delighted to see such a law passed. But doing so might be the one thing that would provoke nationwide truck strikes and a general meltdown in the driver population at large.
I dont think such a law will ever happen, of course. The very nature of a law goes against the deeply-ingrained notion of American equality: If you get to drive 70 mph, then I get to drive 70 mph.
And also its worth noting that Germany is about the size of the state of Oregon and Western Europe is and Im guessing here probably about the size of the American Midwest. So going 55 mph there isnt the massive productivity- and time-killer it would be in the States.
But, in many other ways, a truck-focused trip to Europe is like looking into a crystal ball. You can learn a lot about how fleets will be doing business here in the States soon by checking out whats happening over there.
There are a couple reasons for this. Im thinking about writing a blog soon asking if Europe is now the technological center of the world in terms of new technology. Not to tip my hand, but its pretty obvious that a great deal of the new truck technology were seeing here in the States today is originating in Europe.
The other point is that we now see clearly that technology and regulations go hand-in-hand. In other words, technology makes it easier for governments and their regulatory agencies to manage, monitor and enforce regulations on fleets and, now, individual drivers and vehicles.
This could be a problem here.
I dont buy into the stereotype that long-distance truckers are loners. I tend to see them as simply highly independent. These are people who, by their nature, dont need or want to be micromanaged. By anyone.
Tell me what you want hauled, where you want it to go, when you want it to be there and get the hell out of my way, seems to the basic professional view held by most drivers I talk to. And anything that contrasts with that philosophy is unwelcome to put it mildly.
This strong streak of American individualism runs counter to a European philosophy, which broadly speaking is much more tolerant of accepting and following rules.
To this point, European truck drivers put up with a few technologies that I can already envision American drivers grumbling about.
The first and least intrusive (to American minds) are dash-mounted video cameras.
Last week a 747 cargo plane crash was caught on a dash camera in Afghanistan (not Europe, I know but bear with me). And earlier this year, when a meteor flew in from space and blew up a sizable portion of the Ukraine, the event was caught on a multitude of dash cameras.
I remember thinking at the time, God, the music those Ruskies listen to is HORRIBLE! And, more to my point, Geez, does EVERYONE over there have a dash-mounted video camera?
Turns out, yeah. They do.
In Russia, these days, a good way to make a quick ruble is to throw yourself in front of an on-coming car and collect a nice little insurance settlement. Also, its accepted that having a video record of a car accident is very good thing in court proceedings.
There are already a smattering of fleets here that use dash cameras. Could the practice become widespread?
Id say yes, given the ever-decreasing size and power of digital video recorders and the obvious benefits a video record would have for a driver seeking to prove they werent at fault in an accident. All in all, Id say get ready for this one. Its a no-brainer.
What about EOBRs? The mandated use of on-board data recorders is already a hot topic here in the States and most drivers are firmly opposed to the idea.
If youre in the opposed group, youre not going to like what Im about to tell you next: Based on what Ive seen in Europe, an EOBR is only the first step of what will eventually happen here.
In Europe, each and every CDL has an imbedded electronic chip on it. Moreover, a truck cannot be started unless said CDL is fitted into a slot on the EOBR (usually mounted on the bulkhead over the drivers head). Its a bit like sliding a card into an ATM only it stays there the entire time the truck is in operation.
Once in position, the electronic chip on the CDL copies and stores data off the EBOR for a specific period of time. If you get pulled over by the Polizei, the first thing they do is scan your CDL to see what youve been up to. Got an Hours of Service violation when you tried to stretch things a bit the other night? Or did you drive too fast through a commercial area three days ago? Its on that chip. And youre going to get a ticket for it. It doesnt matter if the cop actually witnessed the crime or not. Hes got electronic evidence in hand. And youre busted!
Another technological inconvenience European drivers have to put up with are on-board breathalyzers. Mostly this is a Swedish thing right now, but it looks like itll spread across the rest of Europe fairly soon.
And its exactly what youre already thinking: Each truck in a fleet is equipped with a breathalyzer. Once the drivers CDL is in the EOBR, the truck still wont start until the driver blows into a breathalyzer tube and passes. Oh, and dont flunk. Because the unit will beam a Fail message to fleet HQ if you do and youll probably get fired.
Most drivers I know here would object to this purely as an affront to their professionalism. On the other hand, a slip of paper in a courtroom proving a driver wasnt impaired at the time of an accident is probably worth 40 million times its weight in gold. So, its hard to argue in terms of pure, cold Vulcan logic.
Will we ever see these technological impositions here? Id say yes, to one degree or another. For older drivers, who remember truckings glory days, these advances must seem incomprehensible. But those guys are few and far between and getting scarcer by the day. And new drivers just entering the workforce today really dont and wont know any better.
http://www.overdriveonline.com/the-...05-13-2013&utm_campaign=OVD&ust_id=c0e5efca21
Dash-mounted video cameras, EOBRs, breathalyzers as required equipment can be expecte
Discussion in 'Truckers News' started by BAYOU, May 13, 2013.
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back in the 70s think ragen did pass the 55mph law on a cmv. don't know how long it lasted but it was tryed
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well so much for the freedom while it lasted ever moron at the FMCSA is going to read this and next year they'll all be implimented in the united states yet every tom dick and harry in a 4 wheeler will still be able to blow a .08, drive like a bat out of hell, and still be allowed to remove their brain every time they turn the ignition on.
BAYOU Thanks this. -
I will be long gone from trucking when they try that BS. I just can't Imagine putting a scan card reader in a truck to track every moment that a driver spends behind the wheel and what he is doing!!!
379exhd Thanks this. -
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Too many of these new steering wheel holding morons see no problem with any of those regulations....
Bunch of dudley-do-right's already love those eobrs because it "evens the playing field" I say they enable the lazy and the ambitious drivers suffer...
I'm not against the breathalyzers...they wouldn't cause me any fines. -
I sure hope they dont make us blow in breathalyzers to start our trucks at wal mart....as much as we have to shut them off, we would be laying in the parking lot suffering hypoxia
taxihacker66 Thanks this.
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