You're just trying not to have to re-grease the 5th wheel and I'm trying not to have to raise and lower improperly dropped trailers. It's not lowest common denominator issue.
Explain why the 5th wheel plate isn't exactly flat from front all the way to the back. Why does EVERY 5th wheel plate have an angled section at it's rear? Why do so many tractors have a air bag dump valve if trailer are supposed to be resting on the ground before you drop? Why do so many truck frames have ramp features built between the 5th wheel and the end of the frame?
Landing gear
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Commuter69, Jul 4, 2016.
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I though we were all discussing the standard gear mechanism as you see on fleet 53 foot, air ride trailers. -
Let me ask is it easier to put a little grease on a 5th wheel or to raise/lower a loaded trailer with none of the weight resting on the tractor?
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Lepton1 Thanks this.
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If a driver has never experienced this snap back, they are not experiencing what I am discussing. Having not experienced this snap back is not the same as "there is no problem lowering a too high trailer", not that you are saying that. -
Another issue is with the full weight of the load resting on the fifth wheel it's nearly impossible to get latched without slamming the kingpin. I hate that. -
That being said, if it happens with any sort of regularity, there is a reason that I haven't experienced it, with all the trailers that I end up grabbing that are really high (some of our customers have us drop empty flatbeds, they then move them inside, load them, and move them to an empty spot, either there is something very weird about where their yards (all of them) or their yard guys are moving the landing gear, because without fail the trailer is too high and I've never met any of our drivers who leave the trailers this high). Any time I need to hook a trailer that is too high, I raise the tractor going under it rather than lowering the trailer. It's just too much work. I've never seen anyone injured the way you describe, but if that's the case, it's another reason to do things my way. A couple 4x4s under the tires will lift the tractor enough to lift the trailer off the ground and you don't have to lower a trailer that is loaded, you just raise the landing gear with no pressure on it like it was dropped lower.
I've never understood this need to work harder rather than smarter, and I don't understand why a company that has had drivers injured would not come up with a better way of dealing with this issue. -
This high trailer is not an issue for OTR drivers because the nature of their job is "hit-and-run" touching trailers maybe once per day or less, or for some always pulling one and only one trailer.
This issue becomes very visible once a driver starts touching multiple trailers per day. This is why I've made the point several times that years of experience is unrelated to "getting this procedure right." The issue comes up with new drivers on our acccount who are working in their first CDL job just as often as it shows up with decades long experienced OTR drivers.
Almost every experienced driver we train on this issue is 1) perplexed why anyone bothers telling them about the matter, and then a week or two later 2) complaining bitterly about the "new guy" (rookie or vet) that is dropping high trailers. It's not an issue until you're doing it often and wasting 5-15 minutes per trailer because some clueless new-hire isn't up to speed.
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