Dude!
http://www.rvgiant.net/rvblog/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/2011-Tiffin-Phaeton.jpg
http://www.roamingtimes.com/rvreports/9/images/tiffin-phaeton-motorhome-interior-2.jpg
Question about a 42,600lb RV wrapped with a commercial advert
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Britman, Aug 25, 2012.
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Recreational vehicles can ONLY be used for recreational purposes. Once you wrap that advertisement around it, it is no longer being used for recreation.
A personal car is not registered as a recreational vehicle. Commercial vehicles can be plated as passenger cars or light trucks IF the vehicle is a passenger car or a light truck. Vehicles tagged as recreational vehicles cannot be used for commercial purposes. -
It's not a Vantare' or Newell, but it looks nice.
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If it's used for trade shows or between movie sets it is commercial. You need to clarify with the employer.
It's class B if the RV is used anyway in a business that makes money. If it's plated commercial it is commercial.
If it's plain out recreational use with private tags then Georgia requires a non-commercial class B at minimum. You have your CDL B so you're covered.
The trick comes if you pull a trailer behind it. You already have a class B so anything 10,000 lbs and under you are okay.
Now if it's a private vehicle and you pull something behind it more than 10,000 lbs, then at minimum Georgia requires you to have a non-commercial class A license. If it's commercial tagged then you would need a CDL A only in that case. -
Best thing to do is contact your local DMV and state police/DOT. Better to get it figured out before hitting the road. These days with sue happy folks/lawyers, if anything happens while your behind the wheel of this vehicle and trying to fly under to radar with it, I can see the crap hitting the fan big time. -
I pulled Nascar show cars to trade shows for about a year with a dually pickup truck and it was considered a commercial vehicle.
I got asked for my medical card several times at the scales.
Also we had to display a DOT number and not for hire on both sides of the truck.
It is the truck that is not for hire,the driver is irrelevant. -
No doubt it is commercial.
Driver is being PAID. -
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We move personally owned motor homes for pay. If the vehicle is moved by us it is considered a commercial vehicle regardless of how it is licensed. -
Trundling down I 85 to Atlanta yesterday at 70 mph was lke driving a looooooooooong fat limo. Sweet.
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