It really depends on the mood of the scale master. I've been ticketed in Maryland for being 50# over on my trailer, but far from over gross.
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Unfortunately it al depends on the mood of the man running the scales. I have been sent on my way when I know I was over 1000 lbs over gross and stopped and had to knock 448 pounds of ice off the trailer once in Fort Morgan, Co to get it down to legal weight.
The major negative I can see is that, if you are busted, they could make you sit at the scale until another truck shows up to take your excess weight off of you and get you legal. Another is that this goes on the companies safestat score. Meaning that when a driver crosses the scale and the scale operator punches in the license number or MC number, the safestat score is displayed to the scale operator. If the company has repeated violation and a bad safestat score, they end being subjected to inspections a bit more often than companies with good safestat scores. The other negative, in my opinion, the most important to consider is that a lot of drivers forget that this is in fact an equipment violation. YOUR personal insurance company will see this when they review your insurance next time. Repeated equipment violations, ie., overweight, tires, lights, etc. very well could mean more money coming out of YOUR, not the companies pockets for YOUR insurance premium on your personal vehicles! |
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By the way, that at the scale on I70. |
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In the future Mr. Dispatcher is going to say, "You ran it once like that, you can do it again." |
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They got me two years ago on a "log violation". Needless to say, all I got was a warning because I called him on it. |
Out west here I think all scales allow you a 200# scale variation tolerance.
You're fine on the drives & trailer. Burn a little fuel & you'll be OK on the steers too. I flirt with 80K almost every load. I figure they pay me to deal with it, not to whine to my dispatcher. |
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Riiiiiiiiiigggggghhhhhhttttttt...... This proves how little you really know...... |
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Truck Scales Weigh Stations DOT Rules Quote; Over-Gross Weight Tolerance: California will allow 200 lbs. For anything more than 200 lbs over, you will get a ticket. Over-Axle Weight Tolerance: California will allow 200 lbs without a ticket. To quote one of your own previos posts; "Do not give advice to others, as you are an imbecile and are still clueless....." |
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LCH is wrong again........ Roll over Woodburn, Ashland, Umatilla, Farewell Bend, KFalls, Ridgefield, WA scales, etc..... With your (edited) thought process on axle weights and see what happens.....(edited) |
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