coldsteelva
Veteran Member
I understand. Thanks aczlan.
It goes by rated/registered weight, not actual weight (which is why I used GCWR/GVWR).So: Why did the OP need to have his 14K trailer de-rated to 9990 lbs?
Surely his GMC 2500 HD does not weigh 16,000 lbs.(26K max combination).
Are we talking about rated weights here, or actual loaded weights?
If a trailer is rated at 14,000 lbs, but only loaded to 10,000 lbs., how is legality determined?
Is towing legality determined by the registered trailer weight, or by what the loaded trailer weight actually is?
Example: Would a truck weighing 16,000 lbs. towing a trailer REGISTERED for 14,000 lbs. but only loaded to 9990 lbs. be legal without a CDL?
Example: Would a truck weighing 16,000 lbs. towing a trailer REGISTERED for 14,000 lbs. but only loaded to 9990 lbs. be legal without a CDL?
I guess it would depend on weigh station inspectors in your state whether they go by actual weight or registered weight.
Per your example most weigh station inspectors in my state go by what the GCWR of truck and trailer is capable of. With your example the truck and trailer GCWR is 30K it would require a CDL.
So even though a 16K truck towing a 9,990 lb trailer is under the 26K requiring a CDL the registered GCWR of the truck / trailer could be 30K. Inspectors would say you have the capability of going over the 26K limit for non-CDL so a CDL would be required. If the truck is registered at 16K and trailer registered at 9990 no CDL required.
It depends.I guess it would depend on weigh station inspectors in your state whether they go by actual weight or registered weight.
Per your example most weigh station inspectors in my state go by what the GCWR of truck and trailer is capable of. With your example the truck and trailer GCWR is 30K it would require a CDL.
So even though a 16K truck towing a 9,990 lb trailer is under the 26K requiring a CDL the registered GCWR of the truck / trailer could be 30K. Inspectors would say you have the capability of going over the 26K limit for non-CDL so a CDL would be required. If the truck is registered at 16K and trailer registered at 9990 no CDL required.
True, that works because your GCWR with that truck and trailer is 23,500#, you don't need a CDL until the GCWR is over 26,001#.I have a 2016 Chevy 2500 HD crew cab regular box. GVWR is 9500
My PJ 22' TF trailer GVWR is 14,000
I did not derate my trailer. I have gone through the local weigh station without issue. They checked my license, registrations and inspection then checked to see tractor and implements were secured properly and waved me on.
It depends.
If the OP had the trailer re-tagged by the manufacturer (ie: the manufacturer's capacity plate says that its rated for 9,990#) that is not the case.
If its a 14k trailer that is registered for 9,990# (ie: the manufacturer's capacity plate say that its a 14k trailer but its only registered for 9,990#) then, yes you are correct he could be required to get a CDL.
That's why many manufacturers offer a 9,990# capacity option.
Aaron Z
In post 22 his example did say a 16K truck towing a 14K registered trailer. Even if the trailer was empty he'd require a CDL but, as stated if the trailer had the factory 9990 cap tag plate he would not.
I have my CDL so not an issue for me. The OP does not.