September-October 2005

Practical Advice for Hauling Heavy Equipment

Just as piloting an ocean-going cargo ship differs from paddling a canoe, so driving a tractor-trailer rig to haul a massive bulldozer or excavator differs from driving the family car.

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By George Leposky

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Other Pre-Hauling Preparations
Here is a checklist of other safety measures a driver should take after tie-down and before driving off.

ð Secure all loading ramps and stow all chock blocks, wedges, and other restraints.
ð Make sure the jack stand is up and is in good condition. If it wears out or develops a kink, have it replaced as soon as possible.
ð Check the hitch before each trip for signs of wear and for proper lubrication. After attaching the trailer to the truck, check the locking mechanism to ensure that it is attached correctly and completely.
ð Check all connections, including the electrical plug, the breakaway switch for electric brakes, and all lighting connections.
ð Inspect the wiring, clean it regularly, and tuck it away in a protected position. Contributors to wiring failure include driving on gravel roads---where stones and grit pepper the coating and insulation---and driving in winter on roads where sand and salt have been spread. Especially in winter, drivers should ask their mechanic to pressure-wash frequently underneath their truck and trailer to remove corrosive salts. Also, to help combat corrosion, spray all plugs and connections with penetrating fluid or WD-40.
ð Check all of the lights to make sure they work. Trouble-shoot and fix any that are not working.
ð Check the brakes.
ð Check the charge on the battery for the electric break-away braking system. If the battery isn’t fully charged, it could freeze in winter and become useless. It should be recharged every three months.
ð Attach the break-away switch cable to its own anchor and check to ensure that it has the correct amount of play.

Drive Slow and Easy
Soon after beginning his or her journey, a wise driver will stop a short distance down the road to make sure that the load is secure and all tie-downs are tight, and then check the load again at regular intervals. The FMCSA regulations require the driver to inspect cargo and securement devices en route and make any necessary adjustments to keep the cargo from shifting or falling off. Such inspections must be performed within the first 50 miles after beginning a trip, and again after three hours or 150 miles of driving, or a change in the driver’s duty status, whichever occurs first.

Once underway, drivers of these large rigs need a different perspective on highway conditions than the average motorist. Gonzalez wants his drivers to watch for and be sensitive to road conditions ahead.

“With low-beds,” he says, “you have to be very careful not to buy the very low ones. They have such a low profile that they hit the pavement sometimes when there’s a dip in the road, or they hit the ground and get stuck when they go over a curb. You buy low-beds because they are easy to load the equipment onto, but with deficiencies in the road, they cause problems.”

Low-beds constructed with protruding metal underneath also have the potential to catch on railroad tracks. A driver hauling such a trailer should be aware of this risk.

Gonzalez encourages his drivers to limit their speed, for increased safety and longer brake life, even if they get traffic tickets for going too slow on expressways where the minimum speed is 40 mph. “I’d rather have a ticket for going too slow than for going too fast,” he says.

Drivers must be alert for the unpredictable actions of other motorists. Gomes recounts an incident in which a car pulled out in front of a driver hauling an empty low-bed trailer. “The driver swerved to the side to avoid hitting the car, and the low-bed came to a stop spanning a canal beside the road. We unhooked the truck, brought in a crane, pulled the low-bed up, and set it on the road. The low-bed was fine.”

Weseman urges drivers to be sensitive to clearance issues. “Avoid surprises,” he advises. “Know what your overall height is, and make sure you can clear underneath bridges. Just because a bridge is marked at a certain height doesn’t mean it’s actually that high. A road crew may have come through with another layer of tar, so now that bridge marked 13 feet, 6 inches, is actually 13 feet, 2 inches.”

Understand Antilock Brakes
Gomes describes antilock brakes as “the biggest safety factor in the last five years.” A computerized antilock braking system (ABS) keeps a vehicle’s wheels from locking up during hard braking. ABS activates when sensors detect an impending lockup, and automatically reduces the braking pressure to a safe level to help the driver keep the vehicle under control---but ABS doesn’t shorten a vehicle’s stopping distance, increase its ability to stop, or compensate for worn or poorly maintained brakes.

The US Department of Transportation has required ABS on truck tractors with air brakes built since March 1, 1997; on trailers built on or after March 1, 1998; and on hydraulically braked trucks built since March 1, 1999. Some older vehicles have been retrofitted with ABS.

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To determine whether a vehicle has ABS, look for a yellow ABS malfunction lamp on the truck’s instrument panel and on the left front or rear corner of the trailer. (If you’re pulling an older trailer that lacks an ABS lamp, look underneath the trailer to see if wheel speed sensor wires run from the back of the brakes to an electronic control unit.)

The ABS malfunction lamp may flicker at start-up for a bulb check, or stay on until the truck speed exceeds 5 mph. If it remains on after that, the system may not be working at every ABS-equipped wheel. Under those circumstances, the brakes will continue to function under normal driving conditions, but the ABS should be serviced as soon as possible. Next Page >

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