January-February 2008

Transfer Trailers: Being Good Neighbors

Like the late comedian Rodney Dangerfield, transfer trailers “don’t get no respect.”

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By George Leposky

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Transfer trailers are notorious for ugliness, being caked with mud and dirt, leaving a trash trail in their wake, chewing up the road surfaces on which they travel, running in unsafe condition, and maneuvering on the highways in a manner that causes accidents. Many people find the trailers odious—in a figurative sense and sometimes literally, as well, if the payload they’re hauling has been fermenting for a while.

Whether these complaints actually are justified depends on the individual situation. Though cost-cutting and sheer laziness may prompt some operators to run battered, grubby, overloaded, unsafe, poorly tarped transfer trailers, others strive to operate safely and responsibly.

“We want to be good neighbors, and we think we’re good people. We would not want it on our conscience if anyone got hurt,” says John Christofferson, sales and marketing manager for Trinity Trailer Manufacturing Inc. in Boise, ID.

“You also want the safest possible trailer you can put out there because if there’s an accident you’re going to get sued. In all our design meetings, the number-one thing we talk about is safety and the possible liability we would face if something went wrong when our trailers were on the highway. One bad accident caused by a poor design or a manufacturing defect has to be considered an ‘unneighborly’ act. If we are not good neighbors, we’re in big trouble.”

A Broad Umbrella
Safety is a broad umbrella that encompasses a wide variety of issues and adaptations. Federal law mandates certain minimum standards, which individual manufacturers are free to exceed.

Photo: Pioneer Tarp
Tarps may be cotton, vinyl, nylon, or other material.

Since 1986, the government has specified that tractor-trailer rigs must have antilock braking systems (ABSs). “The minimum federal requirement on a trailer is [an ABS on] one axle, but to enhance your braking capacity and keep tires from skidding, we recommend that you put ABSs on all the axles,” says Keith Limback of Manac Trailers in Saint-Georges, QB. He is the company’s US general sales manager, based in Freeport, PA.

An ABS is a computerized system of modulators and sensors that pulsates the brakes automatically if it determines that a wheel isn’t rolling while the vehicle is moving. Limback says the minimum system cost of $800 is built into a trailer’s base price, and adding ABSs to the rest of the trailer costs just $300 more.

“Before ABSs, we saw a lot of trailers come to a skidding stop,” he says. “That increases the braking distance and will flat-spot tires. If you hear a truck go by with a tire slapping, it’s got flat spots. The driver doesn’t hear it. He leaves it behind.”

The federal government also requires automatic slack adjusters, which adjust the distance between the brake pad and the brake drum. “As the pad wears, the adjuster moves the pad closer to the drum,” Limback says. “Some manufacturers have an indicator—a dial and a little arrow—that tells you the pad is worn. When the arrow exceeds its range, you know the pads need to be changed. Mechanics should look at the dial as part of their preventive-maintenance routine.”

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Overadjustment of slack adjusters can occur, cautions Drew Larsen, general manager of Express Brake International Inc. in Ocala, FL. “If they aren’t performing properly, then the push rod can overtravel,” he says. “If you have an insufficient travel range left on your push rod, you’ll lose braking power.”

Red and white conspicuity tape must be applied to mark the sides of trailers. Mark Sabol, solid waste product manager at East Manufacturing Corp. in Randolph, OH, says his firm exceeds this requirement with a “retro-reflective” tape on the tarp bar running the entire length of its trailers. Next Page >

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