You're load, you're responsible. It sucks and I know it may be a little unfair but as a driver it's your responsibility.
Opinions Please
Discussion in 'Experienced Truckers' Advice' started by Easternpoints, Nov 22, 2014.
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Chewy352, Tonythetruckerdude and Giggles the Original Thank this.
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He said it was a spread axle so yes they do weigh the individual axles. Like others said, probably the suspension on the rear axle of the trailer.
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This kind of thing is something an experienced driver would likely catch, noticing the trailer wasn't tracking as it should. That and there should have been a noticeable difference in the sidewall bulges. Sucks the OP got stuck with it, but I bet it never happens to him again!
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This would be on the original driver had you scaled and notified your company upon pick up.. I see the shipper responsible as well.. they ought to know its overweight from the the get go.. now all are involved
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He said the load look centered, and he was over on an axle, not gross. How do you reason the shipper is responsible?
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If axle weights aren't correct its still over weight regardless of gross weight
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The only way he was over on one axle of a spread and not the other is a mechanical malfunction. The shipper bears no responsibility in any way, shape, or form.dca Thanks this.
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Next time, if he doesn't have a weigh ticket, meet him at a CAT scale. Have him scale it before he unhooks
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Then so be it however the shipper ought to know weights where and if its legal.. so now where does he go from here.. its still overweight
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He pays the ticket unless he can convince the company to pay it because it was a mechanical issue. It would have been a legal load on a properly functioning piece of equipment. THE SHIPPER DID NOTHING WRONG!
*Throws up hands and walk away*
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