โNov-11-2007 07:40 PM
I have per the request of a few members, stickied this post. Please note, this is not a place to argue whether a law makes sense or not, just what the laws are. If you have a question about wt laws, that appears to be NOT answered in some way shape or form, please ask, and hopefully some of the ACTUAL weights and measures LEO's will answer, or those with some actual knowledge.
In the mean time, I do thank the OP for starting this thread, altho I have taken the liberty to change the title to one I think and hope will be a bit more informative in name.
marty
TV moderator
โJun-20-2014 05:36 PM
โJun-20-2014 01:35 PM
โJun-20-2014 12:13 PM
sacmarata wrote:
No carriers GROSS (truck, trailer, load) may exceed the plated weight of the TV unless the TV is licensed for 80,000lbs and an OW/OD permit has been obtained.
โJun-20-2014 10:20 AM
ShapeShifter wrote:blt2ski wrote:
If you understand the real laws as they pertain to how much wt you can put on an axel, you would know that
Obviously, I don't know the real laws, or I wouldn't be asking the question! ๐
I've picked up some bits and pieces, but have trouble putting it all together. This thread has been very interesting, but also contains quite a bit of confusing and conflicting information. I have a tough time staying withing the manufacturer axle weight ratings on my rig (especially the 20k rear.) I understand the physical ramifications of that, but worry about the potential legal issues.blt2ski wrote:
not over 500 lbs per inch width of tire, which is typically 10-12K per axel, you will not get an overwt ticket.
Great summary, thanks! Please double check my math: My tires are 275/80R22.5, which should give me a 275 mm tread width if I understand tire specifications properly. That's a tad over 10.8" per tire. At 500 lbs per inch, I figure that's 5,400 lbs per tire, or 21,600 for the axle.
So I take it my legal limit is 21,600 on the rear axle, and I'm within my limit. But the legal limit on my front axle would only be 10,800 on the front, even though the front GAWR is 13,000 pounds. According to my last weigh slip, my actual front axle weight is 12,240. So I was worried all this time about my rear axle, when it turns out the front is my problem? Yikes! :E
So I guess I need wider tires on my front? I don't think I have room for 315's, but that's what it sounds like I need... ๐transamz9 wrote:
Floats are the big wide tires that you see on the front of a lot of dump trucks and heavy haul semis.
Thanks! I was guessing something along these lines, but you know what happens when you guess and make assumptions, especially about trade jargon. :S
โJun-20-2014 10:07 AM
โJun-20-2014 09:46 AM
โJun-03-2014 06:19 AM
blt2ski wrote:
If you understand the real laws as they pertain to how much wt you can put on an axel, you would know that
blt2ski wrote:
not over 500 lbs per inch width of tire, which is typically 10-12K per axel, you will not get an overwt ticket.
transamz9 wrote:
Floats are the big wide tires that you see on the front of a lot of dump trucks and heavy haul semis.
โJun-01-2014 01:23 PM
ShapeShifter wrote:transamz9 wrote:
Actually on the rig in your siggy 18,000 is all you are allowed per axle on your drives without a permit. Now if you was to go to a single drive then yes 20,000. Your front is good for only 12,000 without a permit and then 16,000 unless you put floats on.;)
For the benefit of us non-technical folks who don't know the specs of various vehicles, could you please explain how you came up with the numbers? Start with being more specific about the rig you're referring to, I see several in that signature that you could be speaking about.
And what do you mean by "floats"?
โJun-01-2014 01:17 PM
blt2ski wrote:ShapeShifter wrote:transamz9 wrote:
Actually on the rig in your siggy 18,000 is all you are allowed per axle on your drives without a permit. Now if you was to go to a single drive then yes 20,000. Your front is good for only 12,000 without a permit and then 16,000 unless you put floats on.;)
For the benefit of us non-technical folks who don't know the specs of various vehicles, could you please explain how you came up with the numbers? Start with being more specific about the rig you're referring to, I see several in that signature that you could be speaking about.
And what do you mean by "floats"?
If you understand the real laws as they pertain to how much wt you can put on an axel, you would know that tandem axels as the truck in question, the max is typically 34K lbs, but some areas allow 36K lbs or 18K per axel max. A front you can get up to 20K lbs, with floats as some call the tires, or super singles is another. THere is a small portion of the wt law that you need enough tire width also, hence the floats. If you use a typcal 10-12" tire, you get a minimum max of 500 lbs per inch width of tire, or 5-6K lbs per tire, up to 12K per axel. If you have 20" wide tires, then you get the full 20K per axel.
At the end of the day, it is not about how much the manufacture rates the truck for, it is how you are able to spread/bridge a load across the road itself. IE point loading is what the CVEO is taxing and fining you if you get above those loads.
There is no frigen way a pickup pulling a trailer will generally speaking be overweight in how a CVEO enforces the wt laws. IF they have purchased enough GVW, and are not over 500 lbs per inch width of tire, which is typically 10-12K per axel, you will not get an overwt ticket. I've been pulled over a few time at 150% of my manufactures gvwr, NEVER have I gotten an overwt ticket, as I have been under the point load/road bed limits of the law. That is what we are ticketed on, not the manufacture ratings.
Marty
โJun-01-2014 08:55 AM
ShapeShifter wrote:transamz9 wrote:
Actually on the rig in your siggy 18,000 is all you are allowed per axle on your drives without a permit. Now if you was to go to a single drive then yes 20,000. Your front is good for only 12,000 without a permit and then 16,000 unless you put floats on.;)
For the benefit of us non-technical folks who don't know the specs of various vehicles, could you please explain how you came up with the numbers? Start with being more specific about the rig you're referring to, I see several in that signature that you could be speaking about.
And what do you mean by "floats"?
โMay-29-2014 11:43 AM
transamz9 wrote:
Actually on the rig in your siggy 18,000 is all you are allowed per axle on your drives without a permit. Now if you was to go to a single drive then yes 20,000. Your front is good for only 12,000 without a permit and then 16,000 unless you put floats on.;)
โMay-29-2014 10:01 AM
dascom2000 wrote:
Now this is a long lived and delightful thread. As I can finally see through my glazed eyes, I come to the common sense understanding that:
1: Do not put more that 20K# on an axle without a permit.
2: Do not exceed the equipment's safe capacity. (tires, suspension, etc)
3: Do not violate bridge and roadbed loading rules where you are driving
4: Work hard to pass the attitude test short of giving up your rights
to be left alone if following the above.
5: Tell me more about how many college kids can fit into a VW bug.GVCW
I am working real hard to not exceed my equipment's limits, I know what they are. If I don't fail the above, might I still have trouble? ๐
โMay-29-2014 09:10 AM
dascom2000 wrote:
Now this is a long lived and delightful thread. As I can finally see through my glazed eyes, I come to the common sense understanding that:
1: Do not put more that 20K# on an axle without a permit.
2: Do not exceed the equipment's safe capacity. (tires, suspension, etc)
3: Do not violate bridge and roadbed loading rules where you are driving
4: Work hard to pass the attitude test short of giving up your rights
to be left alone if following the above.
5: Tell me more about how many college kids can fit into a VW bug.GVCW
I am working real hard to not exceed my equipment's limits, I know what they are. If I don't fail the above, might I still have trouble? ๐
โDec-23-2012 06:07 PM
โOct-29-2012 12:42 AM
gdavidg wrote:_Adam_ wrote:
Two things...
First... editted... Wasn't inteded to start a flame war.
Second... I have a dodge truck and the RAWR on the door jamb sticker is far less than what the actual manufacturer specifies to to be - In this situation, who is the manufacturer, Dodge or AAM, and whose specification is right or most correct?
what is AAM and where do I go to look at the axle rating for my 3500 srw 2010 Dodge diesel?
Who are the regulating authorities in the State of Washington for commercial vehicles?
Thanks for your input,.