I hauled 44k about a week ago. It was loaded against the step to 5' before the front trailer axle. I only had 27k on my drives. More was on my spread. I found that interesting as I am still learning how to properly load my trailer.
I figured I would have weight more on my drives.
Weight distribution
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by ABA, Feb 27, 2013.
Page 2 of 2
-
-
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
-
How was the load centered on your tailer? York description sounds about right. I'm sure the center of your load was shifted to the rear of the center of the trailer.
-
going from the center of the spread to the kingpin doesn't work. Because anything behind the front axle of the spread is weight on the trailer, not truck. My stepdeck, which also has a short kingpin centers weight about 5 feet in front of the physical center of trailer. And as Oscar mentioned even centering the load well ahead of center it seems to just fail to load the drives appropriately unless you actually put something heavy on the top deck. I have to fight with shipper's pretty hard some times, they go for the middle of that bottom deck and it doesn't work. Actually needs to be loaded nearly to the front of bottom deck.
-
-
Weight gets "hairy" when you're loaded near max gross weight, doesn't it? You'll see the weight shift 1,800lbs to 2,000lbs to your drives by spreading the trailer axle. Check the states that you'll be going through and proceed from there. If the states allows running in spread then do so because 34k is hard to match exactly on a tandems.
Trucking Jobs in 30 seconds
Every month 400 people find a job with the help of TruckersReport.
Page 2 of 2