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Go!Sliding your trailer tandems toward the front or back of the vehicle will primarily change the weight distribution between which sets of axles?
What is the main factor affecting the low-speed offtracking of a tractor trailer?
When a combination vehicle makes a low-speed turn - for example a 90-degree turn at an intersection - the wheels of the rearmost trailer axle follow a path several feet inside the path of the tractor steering axle. This is called low-speed offtracking. Excessive low-speed offtracking may make it necessary for the driver to swing wide into adjacent lanes to execute the turn (that is, to avoid climbing the inside curbs or striking fixed objects like telephone poles).
This performance attribute is affected primarily by the distance from the trailer kingpin to the center of the trailer rear axle, otherwise known as the wheelbase of the semitrailer. To prevent trucks from being too long to maneuvering safely around turns encountered in cities and towns, the maximum length allowed from the kingpin to the trailer tandems is set by the individual states.
What are the two primary laws governing the placement of the tandems?
What is the correct method of determining what percentage of fuel is distributed between the steer axle and the drive axles?
Which of the following are not a primary factor affecting weight distribution across the axles?
The primary factors which will affect the weight distribution across a truck's axles are:
Sliding your 5th wheel will redistribute the weight mainly between which two sets of axles?
What is low-speed offtracking?
California allows 20,000 pounds maximum on the steer axle. The tread width of your tires is 11 inches, and the load rating on your steer tires is 7000 pounds. How much weight can you carry on your steer axle in California?
We have to find the most restrictive law to determine our maximum weight.
California allows up to 20,000 pounds on the steer axle
There is no requirement based upon tread width in California, so the width of your steer tires is irrelevant for this example
Your steer tires have a maximum load rating of 7,000 pounds each, which would therefore limit your legal steer axle weight to 14,000 pounds. This is the most restrictive of the laws, so 14,000 pounds is your legal weight limit in this case.
What is the main factor that will limit how far back you can slide your tandems?
In the following picture, what are axles 2 and 3 commonly referred to as?
This section was created by Trucking Truth to help people understand how to load cargo, scale the truck, and understand the laws about truck weight limits. These materials will not be on your written CDL exams but it is critical that every truck driver knows these materials.
There are four basic weight limits: single axle, tandem axle, bridge formula, and gross vehicle. The Federal Standards are as follows:
There are a long list of critical safety issues which require putting limitations on the gross weight, axle weights, the weight distribution across the length of a vehicle, and the weight distribution across a minimum number of axles.
So as you can see, it's critical in so many ways to make sure that we follow the weight limits in strict accordance with the law. It is incredibly dangerous to overload a vehicle or to have the weight improperly distributed across the axles.
There are several ways to distribute the overall weight of the vehicle across the different sets of axles. You will affect weight distribution by:
There are several factors that will reduce the amount of weight we can transfer between the different sets of axles on the truck:
Congress enacted the Bridge Formula in 1975 to limit the weight-to-length ratio of a vehicle crossing a bridge. They accomplished this either by spreading weight over additional axles or by increasing the distance between axles.
The idea here was to prevent putting too much weight on a relatively small area, causing damage to the road surface and bridge structure. By requiring trucks to spread the weight across a longer distance and distributing the weight across more axles, you help prevent damage to the bridges and roadways.
Compliance with Bridge Formula weight limits is determined by using the following formula:
W = the overall gross weight on any group of two or more consecutive axles to the nearest 500 pounds.
L = the distance in feet between the outer axles of any group of two or more consecutive axles.
N = the number of axles in the group under consideration.
The primary factors which will affect the weight distribution across a truck's axles are:
In the coming pages, we'll go through these one at a time and learn to apply each one individually. Later we'll put them all together and show you how to get your truck's weight distribution legal out on the highways, coast to coast, under any circumstances.