Originally Posted by
520
You can have your GVWR changed at the department of motor vehicles. That comes with a higher registration fee of course. Back when I had a 3/4ton F-250 I had it registered with a 26,000 lb GVWR. I could have had a GVWR of 56,000 but I was too young to get a CDL.
Are you able to remember that far back so that you could tell us the procedure you had to go through to have the GVW of your F250 changed. I've done it a few times with the F350's and larger trucks to avoid the expensive plate fee.
Anytime I was hauling more than my registered GVW would grab a one way permit to cover the weight, keep in mind though I still could not exceed the manufacturers recommendations for said truck.
You can get overwidth permits but then your required to travel certain times of the day with pilot cars.
So as not to keep everyone in suspense waiting on a reply from you, the GVW maybe registered below that of the manufactures listing, the department of motor vehicles requires that you bring in a weigh ticket from having the truck weighed on a scale - empty.
I would suggest pressure washing all the grease and mud from the truck to get an accurate weight - no sense in paying a license fee for grease/ crude, rust scale and mud when it could be actual payload. Emergency equipment, flags and flares, fire extinguisher, chalks and chains etc that you use daily should be tared in with the truck.
I not only have a CDL with air endorsement but have also my National Safety Code number. When we had the yard in Hope we purchased the DOT vehicle inspection manual from the Queens Printer. When the truck went in for its yearly safety all out repairs beforehand had been done by the book.
By having the book won two argument with the inspector who had to call his boss the verify, anyhow the electric horn did not work but the twin air horns did he wanted to disqualify the truck until the electric was repaid. I won the argument.
Air brake equipped trucks require both an audible and visual indicator for low air pressure. The audible is an annoying buzzer that will not silence until the proper air pressure has been met, the visual consists of gauges and a red light. The red light did not work on my truck but had a wig wag installed.
With low air pressure your not going to miss the wig wag as it swings back an forth in front of your line of vision. What it boiled do to is he wanted all the factory installed equipment to work, but his boss said the wig wag would pass. Truck passed its yearly inspection with flying colors.
The DOT vehicle inspection book paid in spades, knowledge is power.
Logging trucks mostly have the wig wag, when your traveling down a steep mountain grade your undivided attention is on the road.
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