November-December 2004

Spare the Tires and Brakes, Spoil the Chassis

Optimize. That's the mantra experts chant when you ask them how to lengthen the life of a waste-collection truck's tires and brakes.

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By George Leposky

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Optimizing means taking into account the application for which the truck will be used, selecting a chassis appropriate to that application, then specifying tires and brakes appropriate to that chassis.

Because some tradeoffs among competing goals often are necessary, an optimal truck may not be ideal in every respect, but it will operate efficiently and cost-effectively throughout its useful life.

Cutting corners on chassis design (which includes the frame, axles, suspension, and transmission), payload capacity, horsepower, or anything else will compromise the truck's overall performance in ways that adversely affect tire and brake life and performance. So will overspecifying, which seems paradoxical but can make a difference if you choose components with a higher performance rating—and cost—than the job actually requires. Either way, even the best tires and brakes that money can buy won't meet performance and useful-life expectations on a truck that isn't right for the job.

Optimizing is easier to say than to do. An involved process that's both science and art, it takes into account a host of variables to define a suitable truck for a given set of circumstances. Then comes the task of choosing from among the many technologies, brands, and models on the market today.

Four Value Drivers

One perspective on optimizing comes from Steve Kiefer, director of marketing and program management for Hendrickson International, a suspension manufacturer. Based in Woodridge, IL, Hendrickson is a subsidiary of The Boler Company of Itasca, IL.

Kiefer lists four "key value drivers" that guide all of his firm's product-development activities:

  1. Reducing the cost of ownership for the vehicle's whole life cycle. "Larger fleets in particular are very financially oriented and value driven," he says.
  2. Reducing the vehicle's weight. "Operational efficiency is foremost for many fleets," he says. "Increasing their ability to carry more payload and reducing overload tickets means more dollars."
  3. Improving ride. "Ride has two major benefits," Kiefer notes. "It enhances driver satisfaction and reduces fatigue, and it also ties into the cost of ownership by reducing damage to the chassis and the body. Bodies have become more sophisticated, with electronics and hydraulics that require a smoother ride."
  4. Improved traction, which comes from an increase in articulation—the extent to which the individual axles in a tandem assembly can move freely up and down, independent of each other, to maintain the traction that keeps both axles driving. Otherwise one axle could get hung up on an obstruction and lose traction. A severe-duty suspension that maximizes articulation and traction is especially important for vehicles operating on rough roads and in landfills, but could constitute an unwarranted additional expense for a waste-collection vehicle that runs only on city streets and empties its load at a transfer station.

More Variables

Other variables include geography, route characteristics, federal and state weight limits, the preferences and priorities of the people buying the truck, and the needs of the people who will use the truck day after day. So where do you begin?

Start with the gross vehicle weight (GVW), which is the vehicle plus its load, advises Scott Edelbach, director of sales and marketing, refuse division, for McNeilus Companies Inc. of Dodge Center, MN, a body manufacturer. McNeilus is a subsidiary of Oshkosh Truck Corporation of Oshkosh, WI.

"Figure out how heavy a payload combination you're going to carry," Edelbach advises. "Then have axles adequate to carry that load, then suspensions adequate to carry the axles, then brakes and tires, then the engine and transmission.

"You can do a lot with a small engine and transmission if you're on a flat surface and won't go over 45 miles per hour. You'll need a bigger engine and transmission if you have 6% or 7% mountain grades, or if you have a long ride to the landfill and want to drive 65 miles per hour because that's the speed limit. Then consider seating capacity, and whether you need air conditioning."

Other considerations include steerability and maneuverability. A tight turning radius may be desirable in cramped quarters, but with greater wheel cut (how far off of center the wheel can turn) comes more tire scrub, a major factor in tire wear. Wheel cut ranges from 34 degrees on some older trucks to 55 degrees on some of the latest models.

When a truck makes a tight turn, the rear axle becomes a pivot point for the whole chassis. As a truck with a dual-wheel tandem drive turns left, all eight tires pivot around the inside left tire on the lead axle. Skidding and sliding, they rub off the rubber. Additional tire wear is the price an operator will pay for faster maneuvering through the route.

Tire size also figures in this equation. Smaller tires allow greater wheel cuts where a larger tire might turn into the frame or the cab. As manufacturers build better tires with a higher GVW rating, a smaller tire may be able to do a job that previously required a larger one. "The 315 tire previously was rated at 9,000 pounds, but now it's rated at 10,000 pounds. You can use it in situations where, before, you needed to go up to the 385 tire, which is 1.5 inches wider and could affect turnability," Edelbach says.

Body Style

How all these variables enter into the choice between the rearloader, frontloader, or sideloader body style for an MSW collection fleet illustrates the complexities of optimization.

Traditional rearloading packer trucks comprise 45% of all municipal waste-collection bodies in the United States, reports Houston Ratledge, production manager at body manufacturer Heil Environmental Industries Ltd. in Chattanooga, TN. Heil is a subsidiary of New York City–based Dover Corporation Inc.

"Rearloaders are the most antiquated, but still the most utilized in the industry—and they're still being made and bought," Ratledge says. "They span the entire spectrum from the smallest city to the largest conglomerate. They range in payload from 6 cubic yards to 32 cubic yards, with compaction ratios from 500 pounds per cubic yard to 1,300 pounds per cubic yard. In terms of chassis configuration, they range from two axles—steering and driving—to five—steering, tandem, pusher, and tag."

Ratledge says the most popular payload size for a rearloader is 20 cubic yards, in part because it mounts on a single rear axle, helping minimize maintenance and repair costs. Second in popularity is 25 cubic yards, even though it mounts on a tandem axle, which is inherently harder on tires. The third most popular, 32 cubic yards, is used primarily where the landfill is remote from the collection route, so the operator needs to go to the landfill with the largest possible load.

As a general rule, Ratledge says, "The smaller the town, the smaller the truck, but Philadelphia and Boston need small bodies to go down narrow alleys. The older the city, the more difficulty a larger truck will have negotiating its inner-city routes."

Efficient but Unappreciated

The frontloader has a carry can that can hold the refuse from seven to 10 homes at a time before being hoisted to discharge its load into the hopper. Some have a cart tipper mounted on the carry can.

Frontloaders are slowly becoming more popular, Ratledge says. "It's a very efficient system, but people have failed to appreciate its merits. It has captured 90% of the restaurant business, 6% or 7% of light industrial, but only 3% or 4% of the residential market."

Ratledge concedes that frontloaders can be hard on streets. "They're heavy, big, difficult to turn, and can't get around some cul-de-sacs without backing up three or four times," he says.

Pricey but Productive

The automated sideloader, with a mechanical arm that grasps, hoists, and tips a tapered cart to empty its contents, "is by far the most efficient system in the industry and the most productive on a cost-per-home basis," Ratledge says. It's a one-man operation, with no helpers aboard to be unproductive when it goes to the landfill. The driver-operator stays in the truck except where a handicapped resident needs help, so personal-injury and liability exposure are low.

"It's also best from a load-distribution standpoint," Ratledge says. "A typical automated sideloader will load the front axle to about 18,000 pounds and the rear axle to about 36,000 pounds. A balanced axle-load distribution is much easier to achieve." That makes the suspension requirements for a sideloader less exacting and more forgiving.

Ratledge says an automated sideloader for a given application will cost about 20% more to purchase and maintain than a rearloader, but will pay for itself by reducing personnel costs and by nearly doubling the route efficiency in collections per hour. Whereas a rearloader on an average route may service 70 homes per hour, an automated sideloader should be able to service 120 homes per hour—or more. "I ran a route in Phoenix that did a pick every 22 seconds," he says. That's 163 homes per hour!

A sideloader's frequent starting and stopping puts extra stress on its brakes and tires, accounting for much of the sideloader's higher maintenance cost. "It doesn't matter," Ratledge says. "When you look at the bottom line, in dollars and cents you have a net benefit."

Getting the Weight Down

Given a GVW dictated by operational requirements or federal and state weight limits, reducing the chassis weight yields greater payload. Weight issues apply to all body styles, but because frontloaders tend to be heavier, their operators are especially eager to trim pounds. "In California, where weight regulations are strictly enforced, some frontloader operators shooting for the absolute very lowest weight are running trucks with phenolic [plastic] materials and aluminum chassis frames," Ratledge says.

Truck manufacturers are responding wherever possible by using lightweight composite materials, aluminum parts, and ductile iron.

Mack Trucks Inc. of Allentown, PA, a member of the Volvo Group of Gothenburg, Sweden, recently introduced its new Advantage chassis series, which allows a user to choose the best frame-rail size and strength for a specific application. It comes in four rail sizes—6-, 7-, 8-, and 9.5-millimeter. All have a higher resistance bending moment (RBM) than Mack's pre-existing line of rails. Tom Davis, Mack's marketing manager for highway products, notes that the new 7-millimeter rail has a higher RBM than the current 8-millimeter rail, but is up to 100 pounds lighter.

"For customers requiring a very heavy-duty rail who to date have been opting for our 6-millimeter with quarter-inch inside channel reinforcement, the new 9.5-millimeter is an excellent alternative. Not only is it lighter, but it also eliminates the need for an inner channel, which prevents potential corrosion from occurring in this area," Davis says.

Suspension Selection

The purpose of a suspension is to connect the tires to the chassis, and to cushion the shock that the tires transmit from the road. Three main types of suspension exist: mechanical, rubber, and air. Each has proponents and detractors. Some firms specialize in just one type; others—including Hendrickson and Ridewell Corporation of Springfield, MO—offer diverse lines in an effort to satisfy multiple preferences and needs. Hybrids combining two different suspension types also are available.

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In the beginning, all suspensions were mechanical, a direct bolting of axle to frame. Then steel leaf springs were introduced to absorb some of the bumps and jolts. Leaf springs are well known for strength, stability, and traction, but they're relatively rigid. When you hit a pothole, the truck tends to rattle.

In older models with extremely rigid steel leaf springs, cornering sharply at high speed could create flat spots on the tires because they would hop (leave the pavement). In extreme cases, an axle could break when the truck's weight came down on it after a hop, resulting in a costly repair job. Next Page >

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