I dreaded making deliveries for about the first month I was on my own because I was NOT good at backing and was drawing some really tough spots. After 4 to 6 weeks it got a lot better. Two things that helped me were a.) Understeer rather than oversteer. b.) I don't know if others will agree with this , but I would always set my tandems all the way to the rear for anything other than a wide open space. Getting rid of that trailer overhang helped me more than anything. You get the wheels in straight right away and you know you are home free.
A set of axles spaced close together, legally defined as more than 40 and less than 96 inches apart by the USDOT. Drivers tend to refer to the tandem axles on their trailer as just "tandems". You might hear a driver say, "I'm 400 pounds overweight on my tandems", referring to his trailer tandems, not his tractor tandems. Tractor tandems are generally just referred to as "drives" which is short for "drive axles".
A set of axles spaced close together, legally defined as more than 40 and less than 96 inches apart by the USDOT. Drivers tend to refer to the tandem axles on their trailer as just "tandems". You might hear a driver say, "I'm 400 pounds overweight on my tandems", referring to his trailer tandems, not his tractor tandems. Tractor tandems are generally just referred to as "drives" which is short for "drive axles".
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I can back up great, its that's moving forward that screws me up. Just remember experience is what you get when you didn't get what you wanted. Just take your time and one day backing up will just kick in and you will do it so easy, you will say that was easy. Good luck. Its gonna happen.