โJan-12-2015 11:45 AM
โJan-21-2015 05:23 AM
โJan-21-2015 05:00 AM
rhagfo wrote:wing_zealot wrote:
Let's be clear about this. There is no law that says "you can't tow overweight". If you are involved in an accident you may be charged with negligence. But, if you are involved in an accident and they are so inclined, they "will" find a reason regardless. You could be charged with negligence for: failure to stop in a safe assured distance, failure to realize there might be a patch of ice on the road, failure to use your turn signal, improper lane usage, speeding, improper signal usage, driving to fast for the conditions, or any one of a thousand other possible charges. They key word in all the above responses is "negligence". They will find a reason.
Lacking an accident, you can never be pulled over, weighed and cited "non-commercial" unless you have over 20,000 lbs on an axle or exceed a tire rating.BenK wrote:
Thank you....that has been and is the point
But you can be cited...cousin Ca highway patrol sergeant did that while on the force...till he quit due to one too many accidents he had to investigate
I would believe that the vehicles that he did pull over and cite "looked Overloaded, and unsafe".
The sad part is that a TV and trailer, can be within ratings, and still grossly unsafe.
While one grossly over ratings, can be perfectly safe! (Excluding over tire ratings)!
โJan-21-2015 04:51 AM
wing_zealot wrote:
Let's be clear about this. There is no law that says "you can't tow overweight". If you are involved in an accident you may be charged with negligence. But, if you are involved in an accident and they are so inclined, they "will" find a reason regardless. You could be charged with negligence for: failure to stop in a safe assured distance, failure to realize there might be a patch of ice on the road, failure to use your turn signal, improper lane usage, speeding, improper signal usage, driving to fast for the conditions, or any one of a thousand other possible charges. They key word in all the above responses is "negligence". They will find a reason.
Lacking an accident, you can never be pulled over, weighed and cited "non-commercial" unless you have over 20,000 lbs on an axle or exceed a tire rating.
BenK wrote:
Thank you....that has been and is the point
But you can be cited...cousin Ca highway patrol sergeant did that while on the force...till he quit due to one too many accidents he had to investigate
โJan-21-2015 04:35 AM
โJan-21-2015 03:52 AM
โJan-20-2015 08:36 PM
kaydeejay wrote:
I've been called a liar about this before, which is why I only mention it in passing any more. (..) That's it. You can believe me or not. I don't care any more.
โJan-20-2015 08:31 PM
โJan-20-2015 06:57 PM
โJan-20-2015 04:51 PM
blt2ski wrote:transamz9 wrote:
Rule of thumb, use the same gear going down as you would going up.
That was a good rule of thumb back about 10-15 plus years ago. With so many of our trucks able to pull typical freeway grades at the speed limit. using a gear or two below what you use going up might be a better option in all honesty! my 02 on this one......
Marty
โJan-20-2015 04:39 PM
NMace wrote:I've been called a liar about this before, which is why I only mention it in passing any more.
If you are not making this up, please give us a citation, newspaper, blog, anything at all. I have been tracking Lexas/Nexas for years, and have yet to find a recorded case of a recreational vehicle (as opposed to a commercial vehicle) being cited, charged, or even sued for being overweight in an accident. No record of insurance being denied. None of the dire consequences you all claim.
Please just give me a single documented account, not your believe, bot what happened to a friend of a friend's second cousin by marriage.
I know it seems logical to you, and even it should happen, but I have yet to see proof. Sorry to offend. But we need to deal in fact.
โJan-20-2015 04:29 PM
cdevidal wrote:GVWR. Vehicles were pickup trucks, not RVs.kaydeejay wrote:
Many years ago I was involved in a couple of court cases where drivers involved in accidents WERE prosecuted for being 1000# and 1500# over. They were charged with negligence.
Just be careful!
kaydeejay, to clarify was that 1000# and 1500# over the GVWR or GCVR? GVWR right?
โJan-20-2015 03:49 PM
โJan-20-2015 02:16 PM
kaydeejay wrote:
Many years ago I was involved in a couple of court cases where drivers involved in accidents WERE prosecuted for being 1000# and 1500# over. They were charged with negligence.
Just be careful!
โJan-19-2015 03:04 PM
transamz9 wrote:
Rule of thumb, use the same gear going down as you would going up.