May-16-2014 06:38 AM
May-21-2014 06:12 AM
ah64id wrote:~DJ~ wrote:
We also license our trucks as passenger cars. 🙂
Be careful with that one. The passenger car plate is only good to 8,000lbs and ISP has started issuing tickets for it. There are 2 other plates 8,001-16,000 and 16,001-26,000. Trailers that have an RV sticker are excempt from your weigh, but if the TV is over 8,000 with the trailer unhooked and you have passenger car plates. I register for 26K so I don't have to mess with it. I am over 8K nearly all of the time, even with an empty bed.
The real BS part about it is that the DMV doesn't advertise the different plates, nor do they ask you about what weight you want when you register.
If an Idaho plate expires in any month but December it's for sure a passenger car plate, if it expires in December it could be a passenger car or 8,000+ non-commercial.
May-20-2014 10:58 AM
May-19-2014 04:27 PM
Reddog1 wrote:
burningman, well stated. The sky is not falling, all trucks are the best in their class.
When I think of the vehicles that are identified as trucks, I just shake my head. I have a Suzuki Samurai, which is sold as a truck.
May-18-2014 06:55 AM
May-17-2014 07:16 PM
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
May-17-2014 05:04 PM
May-17-2014 12:42 PM
May-17-2014 11:19 AM
burningman wrote:
Also, in general the DOT is unconcerned about manufacturer's weight ratings. They go by their own formula of tire size, number of axles, and wheelbase. Those are the things that determine LEGAL weight capacity. I'm pretty sure there's nothing in the law anywhere about what rating the manufacturer places on a truck. That's of no more consequence than a manufacturer's speed rating vs. the state's speed limit. THEY decide the limit based on their own criteria, in both cases.
~DJ~ wrote:
We also license our trucks as passenger cars. 🙂
May-17-2014 11:10 AM
burningman wrote:
Well I have a CDL and used to be a tow truck driver. Years ago in Bellevue, WA, a loaded dump truck coming down a steep hill in a residential neighborhood lost it's brakes and crashed into a house. The investigators ordered, in their words, "every spoonful of dirt" to be loaded back onto the truck so they could check if it was over. There were indeed tickets and lawsuits.
That street now has weight restriction signs.
B
I know that isn't really what this thread is about but the question was asked about when did anything like that ever happen.
The law is slowly catching up to the times, in WA all trucks over 10,000 pounds used to have to stop at the scales, but in recent years it's been upped to only include trucks over 16,000.
Also, in general the DOT is unconcerned about manufacturer's weight ratings. They go by their own formula of tire size, number of axles, and wheelbase. Those are the things that determine LEGAL weight capacity. I'm pretty sure there's nothing in the law anywhere about what rating the manufacturer places on a truck. That's of no more consequence than a manufacturer's speed rating vs. the state's speed limit. THEY decide the limit based on their own criteria, in both cases.
May-17-2014 08:35 AM
burningman wrote:I have seen this posted several times, and believe it to be true in all states. Canada may be different.
... Also, in general the DOT is unconcerned about manufacturer's weight ratings. They go by their own formula of tire size, number of axles, and wheelbase. Those are the things that determine LEGAL weight capacity. I'm pretty sure there's nothing in the law anywhere about what rating the manufacturer places on a truck. That's of no more consequence than a manufacturer's speed rating vs. the state's speed limit. THEY decide the limit based on their own criteria, in both cases.
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
May-17-2014 01:17 AM
May-16-2014 09:28 PM
Jim Cindy wrote:I agree, and have ask for the same evidence for several years. I doubt we will ever see it.
Somebody, anybody, please just once post the who, what, where, when somebody got arrested or sued over their actual weight versus the sticker. Don't mean some trucker hauling to many postholes.
OK now another cup.
2004.5 Ram SLT LB 3500 DRW Quad Cab 4x4
1988 Bigfoot (C11.5) TC (1900# w/standard equip. per decal), 130 watts solar, 100 AH AGM, Polar Cub A/C, EU2000i Honda
Toad: 91 Zuke
May-16-2014 08:24 PM
May-16-2014 07:42 PM
billtex wrote:wintersun wrote:romore wrote:
Until you do get stopped or involved in a wreck. The insurer's lawyers will be all over it like white on rice.
This is a ridiculous myth. Commercial trucks run over their rated weight all the time and that is why there are weigh stations to try to catch them and minimize the damage they do to the roads. It is a matter of road damage and not safety that motivates the states to check truck trailer weights at the scales.
Has anyone seen on an accident form a place to indicate the GVWR and actual weight of the truck? Would the tow truck haul the truck and its load to a weigh scale to have it checked before going to the repair shop or wrecking yard? Please use your head for a moment.
I doubt anyone with a CDL would jeoperdize their livelyhood by driving overweight...the risk is too great.