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发表于 2020-6-29 09:21:40
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本帖最后由 280160 于 2020-6-29 09:26 编辑
{"replyToPid":0,"replyTo":"","text":"A. Front axle doesn't have to be under 12k. most states go by either tire rating or axle limit (stated on sticker normally in the door). Schools only say 12k because that's all that's left out of 80k when the drives and tandems are at 34k.\n\nB. When you get experience, you can often get away with not scaling certain heavy loads. If you have a whole trailer of the same product and scale it the first time to see where the tandems need to be, well then, following times getting that same product you'll already know where you need the tandems. Or if the truck has a suspension gauge on the drive axles, that makes it even easier.\n\nC. Depending on where you were going, over 34k might actually be fine. I just ran a load from the MO/IN boarder to Denver and was 35k on my tandems. But MO allows up to 36k on NON interstate highways so I just had to stay off i70, Kansas weigh stations are allowed to give up to 1,500lb leeway so you can be up to 35,500 (but the scales were closed when I went through), and Colorado's limit is 36k on interstates and 40k on NON-interstates.\n\n\nanyway, sounds like you made the right choice getting off the truck. his bad habits will catch up with him and you don't want to be on the truck when they do as you might end up taking some of the blame. good luck."} |
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