โDec-20-2020 11:42 AM
โJan-07-2021 12:31 PM
dedmiston wrote:SweetLou wrote:
In the State of California, any pick up truck, even the very small rangers, Nissans, etc. are considered commercial. That's how thy justify soaking you on your registration
I remember as a kid being surprised when my dad parked in a yellow curb (commercial loading).
He said, "The state soaks us for commercial plates, so I'm parking in the commercial spot."
โJan-07-2021 12:27 PM
ford truck guy wrote:mkirsch wrote:rhagfo wrote:
So Nalley's went to direct to individual stores and a driver salesman. The vehicle of choice was an F350 DRW and a decent sized box 5er trailer. The total package weight maybe 20,000#. Well the driver salesmen were required in Washington to get CDL's
Makes sense, as their driving was COMMERCIAL in nature after all. Kinda hard to spin a "potato chip sales/delivery person" as private transportation.
That is the key - Commercial use ~ VS ~ Recreational use..
โJan-07-2021 10:07 AM
memtb wrote:
Some of you folks are living in states that are running behind on โsoakingโ the taxpayer (vehicle license) fees. We have the privilege of paying an โadditionalโ fee of $90.00/year .....heavy vehicle fee for each vehicle (truck, 5th wheel, class c). For us, that adds $270.00 to our already high vehicle license plate fees. :M memtb
โJan-07-2021 08:39 AM
mkirsch wrote:rhagfo wrote:
So Nalley's went to direct to individual stores and a driver salesman. The vehicle of choice was an F350 DRW and a decent sized box 5er trailer. The total package weight maybe 20,000#. Well the driver salesmen were required in Washington to get CDL's
Makes sense, as their driving was COMMERCIAL in nature after all. Kinda hard to spin a "potato chip sales/delivery person" as private transportation.
โJan-07-2021 08:37 AM
SweetLou wrote:
In the State of California, any pick up truck, even the very small rangers, Nissans, etc. are considered commercial. That's how thy justify soaking you on your registration
2014 RAM 3500 Diesel 4x4 Dually long bed. B&W RVK3600 hitch โข 2015 Crossroads Elevation Homestead Toy Hauler ("The Taj Mahauler") โข <\br >Toys:
โJan-07-2021 04:58 AM
โJan-07-2021 04:54 AM
rhagfo wrote:
So Nalley's went to direct to individual stores and a driver salesman. The vehicle of choice was an F350 DRW and a decent sized box 5er trailer. The total package weight maybe 20,000#. Well the driver salesmen were required in Washington to get CDL's
โJan-07-2021 04:51 AM
rhagfo wrote:Grit dog wrote:rhagfo wrote:
Grit Dog, don't know where you have been since 2013, but Ram made the jump to big SRW GVWR back then.
2013 Ram 3500 SRW LB GVWR 12,300#
2013 Ram 3500 SRW SB GVWR 11,700#
Ford and GM were still topped out at 11,500# until 2020.
Sorry, I meant 3/4 ton trucks. Last I checked, but icbw, Ram 2500s are still at the 10k limit whereas the other 2 now have supersized 3/4 ton GVW offerings. Albeit, defeating the actual reason for 3/4 tons having a 10k gvw limit for commercial use.
Well the GM and Ford 250/2500 over 10,000# are now class 3 trucks. Most states that have higher/commercial registration for 350/3500 go by GVWR not the badge on the door or hood.
As stated before, why not just get rid of the class 2 diesel trucks.
โJan-07-2021 04:48 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:Grit dog wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
GVWR should be higher but one more pound to 14,001# will put the DRW into commercial territory.
??
I don't understand.
For non commercial use, single vehicles under 26k gvw don't have any drivers license requirements.
For commercial, single vehicles basically have 10k and 26k limits on drivers file, drivers license required.
Maybe some states have different registration requirements over 14k? Just like some states have weird laws about lighter trucks as well, like NY and CA?
What is magical about 14k gvw? In any state I could drive it with a normal drivers license and in WA at least there's no additional inspection requirements or anything, just buy the weight tabs you want.
Didnโt say license. Insurance and registration changes at 14,001# in many locations. Example the F450 stays at Class 3 for the above reasons when it clearly should be Class 4.
โJan-06-2021 10:51 PM
rhagfo wrote:Grit dog wrote:rhagfo wrote:
Grit Dog, don't know where you have been since 2013, but Ram made the jump to big SRW GVWR back then.
2013 Ram 3500 SRW LB GVWR 12,300#
2013 Ram 3500 SRW SB GVWR 11,700#
Ford and GM were still topped out at 11,500# until 2020.
Sorry, I meant 3/4 ton trucks. Last I checked, but icbw, Ram 2500s are still at the 10k limit whereas the other 2 now have supersized 3/4 ton GVW offerings. Albeit, defeating the actual reason for 3/4 tons having a 10k gvw limit for commercial use.
Well the GM and Ford 250/2500 over 10,000# are now class 3 trucks. Most states that have higher/commercial registration for 350/3500 go by GVWR not the badge on the door or hood.
As stated before, why not just get rid of the class 2 diesel trucks.
โJan-06-2021 10:41 PM
Cummins12V98 wrote:Grit dog wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
GVWR should be higher but one more pound to 14,001# will put the DRW into commercial territory.
??
I don't understand.
For non commercial use, single vehicles under 26k gvw don't have any drivers license requirements.
For commercial, single vehicles basically have 10k and 26k limits on drivers file, drivers license required.
Maybe some states have different registration requirements over 14k? Just like some states have weird laws about lighter trucks as well, like NY and CA?
What is magical about 14k gvw? In any state I could drive it with a normal drivers license and in WA at least there's no additional inspection requirements or anything, just buy the weight tabs you want.
Didnโt say license. Insurance and registration changes at 14,001# in many locations. Example the F450 stays at Class 3 for the above reasons when it clearly should be Class 4.
โJan-06-2021 09:26 PM
Grit dog wrote:rhagfo wrote:
Grit Dog, don't know where you have been since 2013, but Ram made the jump to big SRW GVWR back then.
2013 Ram 3500 SRW LB GVWR 12,300#
2013 Ram 3500 SRW SB GVWR 11,700#
Ford and GM were still topped out at 11,500# until 2020.
Sorry, I meant 3/4 ton trucks. Last I checked, but icbw, Ram 2500s are still at the 10k limit whereas the other 2 now have supersized 3/4 ton GVW offerings. Albeit, defeating the actual reason for 3/4 tons having a 10k gvw limit for commercial use.
โJan-06-2021 06:11 PM
Grit dog wrote:Cummins12V98 wrote:
GVWR should be higher but one more pound to 14,001# will put the DRW into commercial territory.
??
I don't understand.
For non commercial use, single vehicles under 26k gvw don't have any drivers license requirements.
For commercial, single vehicles basically have 10k and 26k limits on drivers file, drivers license required.
Maybe some states have different registration requirements over 14k? Just like some states have weird laws about lighter trucks as well, like NY and CA?
What is magical about 14k gvw? In any state I could drive it with a normal drivers license and in WA at least there's no additional inspection requirements or anything, just buy the weight tabs you want.
โJan-06-2021 07:27 AM
Cummins12V98 wrote:
GVWR should be higher but one more pound to 14,001# will put the DRW into commercial territory.