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JHawes lives in Three Rivers, Ca though..........
I have to deliver a weight cert, a current SMOG cert to DMV since I bought my truck in Idaho and registering in Ca.
JHawes lives in Three Rivers, Ca though..........
sory for delay here, some how missed it
I am IN PA
and it was super easy to change things, my local AAA title shop did it all, all I had to do was get truck weights on a certified scale, have a local Inspection station verify vin and sign a paper stating all matched up
Paperwork then got sent to my state's DOT dept
and from there I get a registration with all the info on
If you check the registration sites, you declare for COMMERCIAL PURPOSES.. Like landscaping etc.. Not for personal use. The state wants a pi de of the action on all business. As far as your friend, if he were way over the vehicle intended use and he Is at fault, then yes, this can be brought into the suit. But let's say a tiny car meant for four people weighing 150 each. But the car is carrying 4 300 lb people and two in the trunk and is at fault in an accident. Will this be brought up in a law suit?, you bet..MY suggestion would be to contact a insurance lawyer and ask them what can happen being OVER loaded and then in an Accident
and NO I do NOT see local or state police doing random checking on what a pick up truck weights, and never said they did here/
what I said, is simply, you can over load your truck, speed and break ALL sorts of LAWS
and never get in trouble, TILL you get caught, and then , YOU WILL find out what the end results will be !
if there is again NO difference on what you rate youyr truck at, why is there even difference rates??
the rates are there as a RULE a WAY to measure things
for a reason
and MOST times, as again I am saying
IF you end up in a crash and they find you are WAY past your GVWR, you can be BLAMED
kinda like if your in a fender bender and one driver is DRUNK and other is sober
guess where they tend to place the blame?? LOL
I am NO expert
but I again know a person that got into trouble(BAD CRASH) and he was past his trucks GVWR
insurance lawyers went IMO overboard
but he LOST
again,we all I am sure break the rules at times,and 99% of the time on smaller things, we all get away with them
I know few folks that actually drive 25 in a POSTED 25 zone, and in MY area with a 65 mph speed limit on hwy's
I see FEW THAT Follow them speeds
75 is the NORM and many MUCH faster
I also see MANY drive right past state troopers sitting with radar guns out at 75 and the state trooper doesn't even flinch, never mind move!
does that mean he CANNOT< stop folks for going 10 mph over the speed limit??
NO
it means there is a GRAY area in LIFE In MOST things
that State trooper can write tickets any time the mood hits him, OR MOST likely, he waits for that one vehicle to go BY FAR EXCEEDING the speed limit
and that person GETS A TICKET, for doing so
he is NO different honestly than the rest of us going 10 over, but he gets the prize LOL
If you check the registration sites, you declare for COMMERCIAL PURPOSES.. Like landscaping etc.. Not for personal use. The state wants a pi de of the action on all business. As far as your friend, if he were way over the vehicle intended use and he Is at fault, then yes, this can be brought into the suit. But let's say a tiny car meant for four people weighing 150 each. But the car is carrying 4 300 lb people and two in the trunk and is at fault in an accident. Will this be brought up in a law suit?, you bet..
Like I have said,, bring up links...I have looked but found nothing.
I think it's best to stay within the law and play safe.
I remember my first tow with my 04.5 2500 after I hooked up our newly bought triple axle, 36' TH. I knew I was over loading my truck within the first 30 minutes. Sure, my truck pulling it, but that was about it. I felt that I was being steered; not me steering.
I was too cheap to buy a DRW truck so I converted my SRW 2500 to a DRW 2500. It made a NIGHT-n-DAY difference as far as handling goes, but I knew in the back of my mind that if an unfortunate accident we're to happen, I'd be held responsible.
For me, due to I was using same lic plate from old truck which was at 8800 lbs gwv, and this truck was already past that empty, I raised it to 10k for my plate registration , matching what the trucks max is door this took me from a class 3 to a class 4 In MY state of Pa.
It then cost me I think 26 bucks a yr more, forget exact price, but its a little more each yr
I'm pretty familiar with noncommercial driving laws and vehicle codes in Nevada, and often there is more than one law that might apply to a particular situation... after just a few minutes of digging, I found this code, which is the first in this section. Pretty sure an LE officer could cite someone for being overweight using this law, and others. Is it likely, nope. Do I care enough to worry because I'm over GVWR for the truck but well under my GAWR with my popup camper on the back? Nope.
Oh okay, but increasing your 'registered' GVWR is a very different thing from actually getting the truck's GVWR increased to a number above the door sticker/as delivered from the MFG.
What you did is very easy for me to do here in Nevada as well.
I love the expression when someone says, it has been explained before.. As if I were there and heard it! Obviously if someone asks they did not here it, or read it.. As I have said before..
I changed my door sticker. It cost me a tiny bit of ink, a piece of paper, and a little tape....
I used my knowledge of the frame/suspension/brake/steering/axles/wheels/tires to justify my increase in ratings.
I have upgraded my front axle with larger and stronger ball joints (used on up 5,500 FAWR axles) and wheel bearings (used on E-450 DRW rear axles as well as HD D60 fronts).
I have upgraded my rear suspension with supplemental airbags and an anti-sway bar.
When heavily loaded I run 19.5's with the ability to run 9K per axle. My FAWR is not 9K but my RAWR is. I did up the FAWR but generally try to keep it around 5,200 but without a trailer and a full cab of people it's often 5,200-5,300 so it went up to avoid any issues. My state, Idaho, does NOT have any laws about axle weight ratings (unless it's a TAG axle); however, I figure if I am weighed it will alleviate any unnecessary conversations.
Title 49 CFR 567.7 explains what is required to modify a vehicle. Just google it. Despite what many people believe there is no certification required to modify a GVWR/FAWR/RAWR/etc.. "QUOTE}
HAVE TO ASK< but if you upgrade all the axles and suspension parts, and then GO heavy, ain't your brakes being taxed, as I don't think they were designed to stop a lot of extra LBS
not picking a argument, just honestly asking??
did you modify your brakes at all too??
HAVE TO ASK< but if you upgrade all the axles and suspension parts, and then GO heavy, ain't your brakes being taxed, as I don't think they were designed to stop a lot of extra LBS
not picking a argument, just honestly asking??
did you modify your brakes at all too??