My point exactly. What is the point of dragging around 40 ft of trailer if you can't carry any real weight?
Because there is a market for light bulky loads. It is a little deceiving on the net weight when you take the pin weight off the trailer.
You need to go fishing, Gary![]()
The right CVE Officer on the right day will have a field day with someone pulling a load on a trailer as I posted previously. Conceivably.....they’ll figure out one is trying to skirt the 26k limits, and start digging relentlessly.Because there is a market for light bulky loads. It is a little deceiving on the net weight when you take the pin weight off the trailer.
The right CVE Officer on the right day will have a field day with someone pulling a load on a trailer as I posted previously. Conceivably.....they’ll figure out one is trying to skirt the 26k limits, and start digging relentlessly.
The way I understand it (you would know more than I do) If you register for 26k or less, Non-CDL, but haul 28k, you would be guilty of overweight but not guilty of not having a CDL. You would also have the option of getting legal, weight wise, unload some if possible. Yes or no?
If you register for 28k and haul 26k you would be guilty of not having a CDL if you didn't have one. You would be parked until you got one or another driver that has one could continue. Yes, or no?
You are correct.....IF the truck and trailer remains at or under those stated weights.Why? As long as the truck was 14k or under and the trailer was 12k or under, what is the violation? The laws that govern 26k or under has been around forever. Under 26k non CDL has been around since April of 1992.
The way I understand it (you would know more than I do) If you register for 26k or less, Non-CDL, but haul 28k, you would be guilty of overweight but not guilty of not having a CDL. You would also have the option of getting legal, weight wise, unload some if possible. Yes or no?
If you register for 28k and haul 26k you would be guilty of not having a CDL if you didn't have one. You would be parked until you got one or another driver that has one could continue. Yes, or no?
Back in the day before CDL, a Chauffeurs License would have covered either load.
https://www.ttnews.com/articles/fmcsa-clearinghouse-records-more-56000-truck-driver-violations-2020
and tell me why so many want to skirt the 26,000 lb requirements.
I own my company, I am the only driver for my company, and I only have one truck. I’m still required to take an unannounced pee test.
Your drug testing requirement is based solely on the the discretion of the leasing company you’ve signed with though, correct?Those of us under 26,000 have to comply with everything except IFTA and apportioned tags. For interstate commerce we too have a DOT physical, drug testing, annual truck inspections, display of USDOT numbers, log books and so on. Technically I'm a one truck, one driver company too. I lease to a carrier but am not an employee.
Your drug testing requirement is based solely on the the discretion of the leasing company you’ve signed with though, correct?
I can almost state with 99.9% certainty that it’s initiated by your leasing company, not FMCSA.I don't know who initiates the random tests. We get a call and are instructed to go to a lab.
I can almost state with 99.9% certainty that it’s initiated by your leasing company, not FMCSA.
My point is....those of you under 26,000 lbs GVW are not required to be enrolled in a drug consortium. Yes....everyone is subject to drug testing, as evidenced by the drug clearinghouse.Perhaps the random checks are, but the requirement for drug testing comes from the FMCSA. "Leasing company" is a misnomer. They are a motor carrier, complete with USDOT & MC numbers, with the same requirements as Landstar or any other carrier that has leased on OOs.