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Thread: Spread Axle Weight Limit

  1. #1
    devildice's Avatar
    devildice is offline Senior Board Member devildice is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
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    Default Spread Axle Weight Limit

    I have a question and what better place to ask than here...........

    After a discussion with another driver about axle weights, I looked in the front of the atlas and under the "National Weight & Size Provisions" it says that a 10' spread (in the U.S.) can have up to 43,500lbs.

    My questions is this......am I reading that correctly? Assuming you are not over gross and you have a 10' spread axle, you can scale up to 43,500lbs on them.

  2. #2
    Larry Heyns is offline Member Larry Heyns is an unknown poster at this point.  Don't let him/her around power tools just yet.
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    In my opinion, the higher number may be the result of a calculation of "interior bridge" according to the formula, but it is limited by the National Single Axle limit of 20,000 lbs.



    State roads may have higher single axle limits such as Connecticut (22,400 lbs), Florida (22,000 lbs), Hawaii, (22,500), and Georgia (20,340 lbs). My book is dated 2002.[/url]http://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freight/sw/overview/index.htm

  3. #3
    devildice's Avatar
    devildice is offline Senior Board Member devildice is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Larry Heyns
    In my opinion, the higher number may be the result of a calculation of "interior bridge" according to the formula, but it is limited by the National Single Axle limit of 20,000 lbs.



    State roads may have higher single axle limits such as Connecticut (22,400 lbs), Florida (22,000 lbs), Hawaii, (22,500), and Georgia (20,340 lbs). My book is dated 2002.[/url]http://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freight/sw/overview/index.htm
    so would a spread axle be looked at as 2 single axles??

  4. #4
    Creek Jackson's Avatar
    Creek Jackson is offline Senior Board Member Creek Jackson is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
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    Default

    From my understanding it goes like this;

    10 foot spread or split is 40k
    9 " " " 39k
    8 38k
    7 37k
    6 foot and under is 34k

    Spread is measured center of axle to center of axle.

    Be sure and double check this info.
    Remember,,,,,,, If you eat a live frog first thing every morning, you can rest assured it will likely be the worst thing you will have to do all day.

  5. #5
    devildice's Avatar
    devildice is offline Senior Board Member devildice is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
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    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Creek Jackson
    From my understanding it goes like this;

    10 foot spread or split is 40k
    9 " " " 39k
    8 38k
    7 37k
    6 foot and under is 34k

    Spread is measured center of axle to center of axle.

    Be sure and double check this info.
    based on what it states in the front of the atlas that is what I am thinking too.

  6. #6
    Sealord is offline Senior Board Member Sealord is on the right path.  You could probably safely loan them a quarter.
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    Default Spread Axle

    A ten foot spread is 20K per axle, or 40K total. Any more, the scale house monster will get you. Still can't go over 80K gross. Make sure the lady runnin' the CAT scale knows how to split the table. BOL

  7. #7
    Larry Heyns is offline Member Larry Heyns is an unknown poster at this point.  Don't let him/her around power tools just yet.
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    Federal law provides that any two or more consecutive axles may not exceed the weight computed by the Formula even though single axles, tandem axles, and gross weight are within legal limits. In other words, the axle group that includes the entire truck—sometimes call the "outer bridge" group—must comply with the Bridge Formula. But interior combinations of axles, such as the "tractor bridge" (axles 1, 2, and 3) and "trailer bridge" (axles 2, 3, 4, and 5), must also be in compliance with weights computed by the Formula.

    In the formula, Weight equals 500 [(LN divided by N-1) + 12N+36]. L is the distance in feet between outer axles of any two cosecutive axle combinations, and N is the number of axles.

    If you could get 48 feet between the center of the first drive axle and the center of the last trailer tandem axle, the formula would calculate the weight as follows:
    500[(48x4 divided by 4-1) + (12 x 4) + 36]. The answer is 74,000 lbs.

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