Aug-17-2016 08:02 AM
Sep-01-2016 03:37 PM
Aug-30-2016 05:19 PM
mowermech wrote:
I have sent an email to WA. ST. Attorney General's office, requesting clarification of RCW 46.04.620.
I have received a confirmation that the question has been turned over to staff in the AGO. Regardless of the outcome, I will post it.
Aug-23-2016 10:22 AM
Aug-23-2016 09:06 AM
Aug-23-2016 07:17 AM
Jayco-noslide wrote:
After reading most of these posts I'm still not sure if I will get aux. brakes for my Sonic or not. It seems to me it's like a lot of things in life; do you get everything you can to be "safe" and consider the costs necessary or irrelevant or do you choose to gamble a little and save over $1000 and some extra bother in this case. If being brakeless were absolutely illegal everywhere and if I personally felt braking were obviously inadequate, I would be getting brakes tomorrow. But neither of those conditions is true so it seems mainly the idea that I might get sued or ticketed so I will probably remain brakeless for now.
Aug-23-2016 02:59 AM
Jayco-noslide wrote:
After reading most of these posts I'm still not sure if I will get aux. brakes for my Sonic or not. It seems to me it's like a lot of things in life; do you get everything you can to be "safe" and consider the costs necessary or irrelevant or do you choose to gamble a little and save over $1000 and some extra bother in this case. If being brakeless were absolutely illegal everywhere and if I personally felt braking were obviously inadequate, I would be getting brakes tomorrow. But neither of those conditions is true so it seems mainly the idea that I might get sued or ticketed so I will probably remain brakeless for now.
Aug-22-2016 05:03 PM
Aug-22-2016 03:54 PM
Aug-22-2016 03:22 PM
mowermech wrote:This is right.
Bumpy, the "Braking Performance Standards" are ALREADY in the Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards (FMVSS). Most state laws simply mirror the FMVSS.
CA does not. They allow 5 feet further than FMVSS. MT is practically word-for-word, as are many other states. The Standard specifies that the test is to be done on a level, clean, dry, hard surface. It does not specify what the surface is to be made of. See MCA 61-9-312 to find the exact wording.
If a LEO writes a ticket for failing to meet the standard, it is HIS responsibility to show the ticket is for a valid infraction, it is not the driver's responsibility to prove the ticket is wrong. If the LEO can not accurately perform the necessary test, he will not write the ticket.
Does that mean the Braking Performance Standard is rarely enforced, and for all practical purposes is unenforceable?
Yes, I guess it does!
Aug-22-2016 02:09 PM
Aug-22-2016 09:35 AM
SoCalDesertRider wrote:
Mowermech points out that many states simply have a braking performance law, rather than laws based simply on the weight of the towed vehicle or trailer. A simple braking performance law makes the most sense.
.
Aug-22-2016 05:12 AM
Aug-20-2016 07:08 AM
Aug-19-2016 07:09 PM
nevadanick wrote:
Mowermech, fyi 2 bumper pulls are legal in Ca.