Trucking in the Northland

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(11-10-2024, 10:15 AM)Towtruck Wrote: I trained a couple of the scale officers from Fairbanks five years ago. Great guys.  As a 40 year driver and a 24 year employee/ instructor at a truck scale I can say I have seen it all for shenanigans trying to get out of a weight ticket. 500 pounds is not worth the fight on the enforcement side and we would rarely hold anyone up for that small of an overweight. I routinely overload my logging truck by 880 pounds as I know on my route to the mill if I ever get stopped for weight the officer has to give me 1% . If I'm going to take the freeway I have to be within 280 pounds. The new guys at the scales take time to figure out life and stop messing with the small stuff. Once they get a few big overweights, a few broken frames, busted suspensions then they will see that the small stuff is not worth messing with.

I do gotta love the smacking of the lights though....I don't care if it works when you hit it, it did not work when asked to turn it on.  Whacking it is not a fix and you will still leave my bay with a violation for that.  The guys that when circled for weight who decide to stop out back and adjust before I can weight you for the first time are my favorite. You will be getting that ticket for 200 pounds and a failure to obey a regulatory sign for not following directions and coming to the scale. You should hear the excuses for that stunt.....just come around and get weighed, it won't be as bad as admitting you know you are heavy by trying to fix it on the way around the building and getting caught.  The guys that play with tag axles don't get far either on our scale.....that is an admission you know you are heavy and  again we don't take kindly to it.

The drivers that follow directions and take their lumps when heavy or long without all the excuses are my favorite, they are just doing their job and not trying to get away with something. and 99% of the time they leave without any tickets.


not trying to make too much of an excuse, but there is nowhere to weigh up here in Fairbanks currently, with the exception of the Lynden yard if you are hauling their freight, and their scale is not accurate. I’ve got a squeeze on my truck, and between that and a little bit of luck, I’ve never been overweight before, or at least not enough to have them pull me in. 

this time I was hauling fracking sand on a trailer I didn’t load. With 80lb on my trailer tag I was just a hair over 42k on my load scale, but had no way of knowing what my other axles weighed. 

42k is legal up here in the winter time. We are allowed to take weight off the trailer axles, and put it forward on the drives, but the overall weight has to stay the same. With this load I was allowed 106,400 and I grossed 105,800 on the scales so I was right there.
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Messages In This Thread
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by tommag - 11-08-2024, 07:24 PM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by srjdsmith - 11-08-2024, 11:48 PM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by Towtruck - 11-09-2024, 09:04 PM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by MontanaLon - 11-09-2024, 10:30 PM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by tommag - 11-10-2024, 02:02 AM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by Towtruck - 11-10-2024, 10:15 AM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by The Shooters Apprentice - 11-10-2024, 03:29 PM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by Towtruck - 11-11-2024, 12:14 AM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by tommag - 11-11-2024, 01:07 AM
RE: Trucking in the Northland - by tommag - 11-13-2024, 05:58 PM



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