The Haymaker
Veteran Member
Wonder if someone would pick that up. I travel into New Brunswick Canada a lot.![]()
Gotcha..... I drive LTL out of Pittsfield, get into the county occasionally, but spend most of my days in Washington county.
Wonder if someone would pick that up. I travel into New Brunswick Canada a lot.![]()
I'm not even sure that DMV would give you a road test for a class A CDL if you showed up in a F450 with a trailer heavy enough to technically require a class A CDL.
As far as "only existing to generate revenue", what would you suggest the alternative be? (Or are you saying that all commercial vehicle and driver rules and regulations are unnecessary in the first place?) In lieu of fines and such, should a driver be required to park their rig for "X" number of hours per infraction or something? That wouldn't fly. And pulling people over for infractions and issuing "warnings" is laughable as well.
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They will here and in many other states.
Your book is wrong.
From Illinois motor vehicle codes.
SB2927 Engrossed - 3 - LRB096 15493 AJT 30723 b
1 combinations of vehicles may not exceed a total of 2 vehicles
2 except the following:
3 (1) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one trailer.
4 (2) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one converter
5 dolly.
6 (3) A truck tractor semitrailer may draw one vehicle
7 that is defined in Chapter 1 as special mobile equipment,
8 provided the overall dimension does not exceed 60 feet.
9 (4) A truck in transit may draw 3 trucks in transit
10 coupled together by the triple saddlemount method.
11 (5) Recreational vehicles consisting of 3 vehicles,
12 provided the following:
13 (A) The total overall dimension does not exceed 60
14 feet.
15 (B) The towing vehicle is a properly registered
16 vehicle capable of towing another vehicle using a
17 fifth-wheel type assembly.
18 (C) The second vehicle in the combination of
19 vehicles is a recreational vehicle that is towed by a
20 fifth-wheel assembly. This vehicle must be properly
21 registered and must be equipped with brakes,
22 regardless of weight.
23 (D) The third vehicle must be the lightest of the 3
24 vehicles and be a trailer or semitrailer designed or
25 used for transporting a boat, all-terrain vehicle,
26 personal watercraft, or motorcycle.
Back to the original post, the reason why campers and large RV's aren't inside the radar is because many politicians own them, while not many drive a CMV.
Originally it was to make things safer. Now it is a money maker.Good point, my choice of wording was poor. A better choice of words would have been, "The implementation of commercial vehicle enforcement programs is all about money." Ultimately what I'm getting at is that creating units to enforce commercial vehicle laws is all about the revenue that they will generate. So ultimately it's not the officers doing the enforcement that I take issue with, it's the politicians that create units which do nothing but enforce commercial vehicle laws. I hope that makes it more clear, I really can't think of a better way to say what I am trying to get across. I think that there are much better ways to spend law enforcement resources than all the efforts put into commercial vehicle enforcement.
You would have a Class A CDL with a no air brake restriction. Unless the truck/trailer had air brakes. And yes you can be tested that way.To answer your other question, yes I do think that some of the commercial vehicle laws are too extreme. Many of the laws were written a long time ago before many modern advancements in vehicle performance and safety. It used to take a heavy duty commercial truck to pull some of the loads that a pickup truck can easily accomplish nowadays. I'm opposed to requiring a pickup truck driver to have a class A CDL for just about anything for example. I'm not even sure that DMV would give you a road test for a class A CDL if you showed up in a F450 with a trailer heavy enough to technically require a class A CDL. And frankly I think it silly to require a person who will never drive anything other than that F450 with its albeit heavy load to learn to operate a Kenworth tractor rig or its equivalent in order to be able to legally pull some of the heavy loads that a pickup can nowadays easily and safely pull.
Agreed!:thumbsup:I also have a problem with the CDL regulations not being uniform. If it were so important that people have a CDL, drug testing and yearly medical exam to drive a bus even if there is nobody on the bus because of how dangerous such a large vehicle can be, then why is it not important that some rich guy with more money than sense can get behind the wheel of that same bus, but with a living interior instead of seats and tool around the road once or twice a year without any clue to the capabilities of the vehicle or commitment to learn about the vehicle? The reality is because the RV industry has a more powerful lobby, not because of any commitment to safety.
I'm generally a fan of keeping the government out of most of the people's every day business. I'm okay with extra taxes and so forth for heavy vehicles because they put proportionally more wear and tear on the roads. I just get tired of the government nickle and diming people to death over things which aren't that big of a deal in the grand scheme of things, and I get really upset when the laws are not applied uniformly across the board. Yeah if someone is driving down the road with a truck full of gravel with no cover over the top and causing rocks to fly out of the back and break other people's property then yeah he needs a fine as it's pretty easy to see the hazards associated with such behavior. However some of the things that people get tickets for don't even equate to operating something outside of its designed safety limits even those those safety limits are obviously in excess of its rated limits.
May very well be. Never had a issue the two time I have done so in Illinois. I also know a trailer dealer who tows double stacks of 4, 8 trailers in total, from MO to IN behind a Ford E-350 Van and never had a issue.
My guide may very well be wrong. It states in the front its just a guide. It list all vehicles tow ratings and state laws. It also has a phone number for each state so I guess if one was really concerned they could call.
Chris
Attached is a PDF from the DOT that explains the farm exemptions. This is current as of March 2010. I am going to print it out and have it in my truck. Hope this helps.
For purposes of equipment, maintenance, logs etc., Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations define a CMV as a vehicle or combination with a GVWR/GCWR of 10,001 lbs. or more. However, Wisconsin Statutes 194.05(4) contains an exemption from FMCSR for farm trucks or
dual purpose farm trucks combined with any semi-trailer
or farm trailer or any vehicle combined with a horse trailer,
if the vehicle combinationç—´ gross combination weight rating, registered weight and actual gross weight do not exceed 26,000 lbs., and the vehicle combination is operated solely in intrastate commerce.