john_bud said:
I too was worried about this and thought along the lines of over 10,000# or combination over 26,000#. BUT happily here in the great state of CheeseConsin, I can have a 6000# truck and a 20,000# trailer and NOT need a CDL, a 26,000# truck and an 8000# trailer and NOT need a CDL, a 20,000# truck and an 8000# trailer and NOT need a CDL. These examples are posted on the wisconsin dot web site in a PDF titled "cdl-vol1.pdf".
The keys are if the trailer is over 10,000# AND the total combination is over 26,000#. If the Trailer is UNDER 10,000# and the truck is at 26,000# you are just barely ok. I guess WI is going by the Fed law and not tighter. I do feel sorry for you guys in tougher states, especially the peoples republic of California. Seems crazy strict to me!
jb
I see the chart you are getting that info from. I would be very leary of that. It doesnt meet federal standards and doesnt match what they say here:
Commercial driver license (CDL) - Wisconsin Department of Transportation or here
http://www.dot.wisconsin.gov/drivers/docs/cdl-vol1.pdf, which is a couple pages below that chart.:
You must have a CDL to operate:
• Any single vehicle with a gross vehicle weight rating
(GVWR), actual weight, or registered weight over
26,000 lbs. or such vehicle towing a vehicle with a
GVWR, actual weight, or registered weight of 10,000
lbs. or less.
• Any combination of vehicles with a gross vehicle
weight rating (GVWR), actual weight, or registered
weight over 26,000 lbs. provided the GVWR, actual
weight, or registered weight of the towed vehicle(s)
is more than 10,000 lbs.
I think someone in WI government has a reading comprehension problem. Maybe they have their manuals printed in china or something. Here is why the chart can not be right.
"COMMERCIAL MOTOR VEHICLE SAFETY ACT OF 1986
The Act retained the State's right to issue a driver's license, but established minimum national standards which States must meet when licensing CMV drivers.
It is important to note that the Act does not require drivers to obtain a separate Federal license; it merely requires States to upgrade their existing testing and licensing programs, if necessary, to conform with the Federal minimum standards"
Here is the applicable federal standard:
"Commercial motor vehicle (CMV) means a motor vehicle or combination of motor vehicles used in commerce to transport passengers or property if the motor vehicle-
(a) Has a gross combination weight rating of 11,794 kilograms or more (26,001 pounds or more) inclusive of a towed unit(s) with a gross vehicle weight rating of more than 4,536 kilograms (10,000 pounds); or
(b) Has a gross vehicle weight rating of 11,794 or more kilograms (26,001 pounds or more);"