Thank you Rayh,
I hate to admit as well I spent 8 years as a Colorado Municipal Judge hearing traffic, city ordinance violations, misdemeanors, lived in Colorado almost 30 years, and never new or studied CRS about trailers and weights. I have sent off many, many transcripts to DMV for all kinds of different violations, but weight and most CDL violations are be written into county court as a state violation. But hey, I make mistakes like anyone, just kind of embarrassed I went out and purchased the biggest trailer I could find, (the 20 footer, 20,000 GVWR) and never thought about checking into the weights or if it was legal to pull this with my pickup. I see these types up and down the freeway, and every rancher out here seems to have a big one on their place. My other option was the farm plate on the pickup, but then I would be limited to 150 miles from the ranch here. I even have a class B CDL now, for any single vehicle over 26,000, P endorsed for School Bus, airbrakes, and tanker. Our fire dept has a 3300 gal Freightliner over 26,000, so I went ahead an took the tanker test just in the event later down the road, they change that law. Fire apparatus is currently exempt, but I see California has requirements.
Again, I think some are getting confused and think that the 10,000 lb is the limit, but its really when towing over 10,000 in combination, it falls under the combination of the two vehicle catagory. Michigan explains this better than most states.....thanks for posting.
Another thing, a state dosen't adopt federal law......federal law is enforced across the US period. A state can amend their laws stricter like California did, but federal law still exist in all states. Our city ordinances must follow state CRS or can be amended stricter, but no less than state law.
BTW, I was born in Detroit, grew up just north of Pontiac in a town called Clarkston
Steve