That sounds like quite a few places in PA. Along I-83 is what immediately springs to mind.
What Speed to Exit a Highway for an Off-Ramp
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Damaged_Goods, Nov 26, 2016.
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You just concern yourself with the task at hand, which is negotiating the freeway offramp safely. For starters, until you get a feel for your truck and how it corners, I'd say take those between 5-10 mph less than what's posted on the yellow sign.Singlescrew and x1Heavy Thank this. -
This issue has also caused some problems at scales too. Lots of scales now will close up for a few minutes if trucks are backed up on the breakdown lanes. I want to remember North Carolina actually had a fatal accident with this at their I 85 Scales near Charlotte about 25 30 years ago. These new "supercoops" were designed to get trucks in and out until some moron scalemaster decides to do log checks on the static scale.
My comment reminds me of a night many years ago while headed west in Alabama on I 20/59 and I kept hearing about the scale master asleep at the Mississippi West Bound Toomsuba scale. I was just about to cross the State line when a guy screamed in the CB oh Hell Warner just hit his Horn and the scalemaster started stopping everybody and checking logs. The backups went a ways back into Alabama. This was in the early morning hours and I am still shocked some 4 wheeler did not fly under one of those parked trucks.Singlescrew and x1Heavy Thank this. -
Singlescrew Thanks this.
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JReding Thanks this.
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Don't worry about anyone behind you. Yes it's good to keep an eye back there, but that Decap bar is their reward if they screw it up. Not your problem.
I disagree with ramps marked for 18 wheelers, I would have rolled a thousand times or gone off if I hit em at rated speeds the way we are loaded. (Usually meat or coil)Singlescrew Thanks this. -
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Thanks for Video...Scottied67
It's what I was looking for....he had the same concerns as me as speed prior to exiting a highway...He basically said it's all a judgement call...there's no definitive answer...
And thinking about it more; I would have to say what's easier to explain to the police or your employer. # 1. You got into an accident because someone rear ended you cause you slowed down too much before a ramp which would ~95% of the time be the other vehicles fault....or #2. You flipped the truck over cause you were going too fast for the exit ramp which would be %100 your fault....
I'll take #1. TYsandralee and scottied67 Thank this. -
me that the posted speed limit on off ramps are "only a suggestion" and he would get upset because I would slow down, telling me that in a posted 35mph, he would
be 45 or more.
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