Yeah, I know ... .....
The FMCSA site says "provided"
The Ohio DMV site says "as long as"
And he changed it to read "OR IF" on his website.
We went back and forth in about 20 emails, and he finally added the FMCSA statement in red, but left "OR IF" in his original statement.
Here is one of the emails I sent him, am I reading this wrong? ... ... ... .
Buck,
read these 2 in succession ... ... .....
Class A -- Any combination of vehicles with a GVWR of 26,001 or more pounds provided the GVWR of the vehicle(s) being towed is in excess of 10,000 pounds.
Class B -- Any single vehicle with a GVWR of 26,001 or more pounds, or any such vehicle towing a vehicle not in excess of 10,000 pounds GVWR.
take 2 combination vehicles, both with a 29,000# GVWR
a)9,000# truck and 20,000# trailer
b)27,000# truck and 2,000# trailer
truck "a" requires a Class A CDL
truck "b" requires a Class B CDL
This is why the 10,000# trailer clause is added to the regulations, not to require a CDL for any trailer over 10,000#. 26,001# is still the benchmark.
Actually, if you operated a Yugo commercially you need a CDL CLass "C"...
The whole point of the CDL and Commercial Liscensing is that, you are operating for profit... that's how RVs are exempt that you know are well over CDL class limits.
steved
you are interchanging GCWR and GVWR.
No I'm not, it says ... ... .....
Any combination of vehicles with a GVWR of 26,001
No I'm not, it says ... ... .....
Any combination of vehicles with a GVWR of 26,001
Exactly. GCWR-Gross COMBINATION Weight Rating. So the adding of the GVWRs of the tow vehicle and trailer is the GCWR. If the trailers GVWR is over 10,000 pounds AND the GCWR is over 26,000 pounds you need a Class A CDL if operating commercially (and in some states non-commercially). Since the GVWR of my 97 is 10,500 I can tow trailers with GVWRs up to 15,500 using my class C non-commercial license legally, and I do.
Well, that is why this guys sites burns me.
I operate commercially with a DOT, but no CDL.
He is spreading crap to my prospective clients by saying that I need a CDL, and not to hire any company with out a CDL driver.
Has anybody figured out how to get 16 people in a Yugo?
Class C -- Any single vehicle, or combination of vehicles, that does not meet the definition of Class A or Class B, but is either designed to transport 16 or more passengers, including the driver, or is placarded for hazardous materials.
if you're considering reliability it's "FEWGO"!! LOL!
You must first of all realize that the CDL is a FEDERAL requirement for commercial vehicles. Each state is charged with making laws that comply, they can make ANY vehicle need a CDL in their state, but they cannot REDUCE the requirements of the Feds. Therein lies the reason we get different views from different states.
In general, if you are hauling commercially, you need a CDL to be competitive and in compliance with each state. The GVWR 26001 rule is only ONE of several definitions. .