Dirthog said:
You may believe you don't have to obey the signs but they contintialy pull pickup's with trailers and one ton trucks in and go over them have seen more than a few of them setting there with red tags on them as I go past it almost every day. They don't care if you are a commerical vehicle or not they are looking for overloads and unsafe equipment which is the way it should be I have a large truck and lowboy and pay over $1400 a year just in license and have to keep every little thing perfect to try and stay legal and someone with a old junk pickup can overload it and run down the road with no worries that is wrong.
Being stopped and told to pull to a weigh station is totally different than pulling in as you pass a station. Im saying if you arent driving a commercial vehicle you dont have to voluntarily pull through the scales. Obviously if you are pulled over and told to proceed to the scales, youve got to do that.
Im not saying to "disobey" the signs. Im saying the signs you see along the road are very simplified and abbreviated versions of the law. They cant very well include the whole motor vehicle code on a street sign. Some state weigh station signs say "all trucks must enter", some say "commercial vehicles", some say "trucks over 26000lbs" some say "trucks and buses enter". It does vary from state to state but in general, if you arent driving a commercial vehicle, dont bother with weigh stations.
I drive my little pickup pulling a utility trailer over the scales, Steer axle = 4000lbs, single drive axle = 5000, tandem trailer axle = 6000. Does the guy in the little building know if im legal? Do you really think he knows how much my particular pickup can pull or how much my trailer is rated for? Does he know how much my tires and axles are rated for? Maybe they will check that my DOT physical is current, oh wait, I dont need one. They could check that my HOS are good, oh, I dont need a logbook either. Maybe they could check my required equipment, nope, no required equipment needed.
Sure they could check my drivers license, insurance, registration, vehicle equipment. Why doesnt everyone just pull in and scale, including cars and motorcycles.
My point is they cant tell if im legal by just watching me pull over the scales. The pickups you see parked were most likely stopped by a trooper and told to proceed to the weigh station because he witnessed something he thought was unsafe or illegal, they werent weighed and told to park it..