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Glossary of Truck Terms
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- ABS (Anti lock Braking System)
- Computer, sensors and solenoid valves which
together monitor wheel speed and modulate braking force if wheel
lockup is sensed during braking. Helps the driver retain control
of the vehicle during heavy braking on slippery roads.
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- AFV (Alternative Fueled Vehicle)
- Vehicle powered by a fuel other than gasoline
or diesel.
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- Air Ride Suspension
- Suspension which supports the load on air-filled
rubber bags rather than steel springs. Compressed air is supplied
by the same engine-driven air compressor and reservoir tanks which
provide air to the air brake system.
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- ATC (Automatic Traction Control)
- Usually an optional feature based on ABS,
it prevents spinning of the drive wheels under power on slippery
surfaces by braking individual wheels and/or reducing engine throttle.
Also called ASR, an acronym sometimes loosely translated from
the German as anti-spin regulation.
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- ATV (All Terrain Vehicle)
- Vehicle designed for any type of terrain.
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- AVI (Automatic Vehicle Identification)
- System combining an on-board transponder
with roadside receivers to automate identification of vehicles.
Uses include electronic toll collection and stolen vehicle detection.
(see IVHS)
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- AVL (Automated Vehicle Location)
- Class of technologies designed to locate
vehicles for fleet management purposes and for stolen vehicle
recovery. Infrastructure can be land-based radio towers or satellites.
(see IVHS)
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- Axle
- Structural component to which wheels,
brakes and suspension are attached.
- Drive axles are those with powered wheels.
- Front axle is usually called the steer
axle.
- Pusher axles are unpowered and go ahead
of drive axles.
- Rear axles may be drive, tag or pusher
types.
- Tag axles are unpowered and go behind
drive axles.
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- BBC
Distance from a truck's front bumper to the back of its cab.
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- Bill of Lading
Itemized list of goods contained in a shipment.
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- Blind Spot
Areas around a commercial vehicle that are not visible to the
driver either through the windshield, side windows or mirrors.
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- Bobtail
Tractor operating without a trailer.
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- Bogie (also spelled bogey).
Assembly of two or more axles, usually a pair in tandem.
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- Brake Horsepower (bhp)
Engine horsepower rating as determined by brake dynamometer
testing. (see Horsepower)
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- Bridge Formula
A bridge protection formula used by federal and state governments
to regulate the amount of weight that can be put on each of a
vehicle's axles, and how far apart the axles (or groups of axles)
must be to legally carry a given weight.
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- Bunk
See Sleeper.
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- Cabover (Cab-Over-Engine, COE)
Truck or tractor design in which the cab sits over the engine
on the chassis.
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- Cargo Weight
Combined weight of all loads, gear and supplies on a vehicle.
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- Cartage Company
Company that provides local (within a town, city or municipality)
pick-up and delivery.
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- Cast Spoke Wheel
Wheel with five or six spokes originating from a center hub. The
spoke portion, usually made of cast steel, is bolted to a multiple-piece
steel rim (see Demountable Rim; Disc
Wheel).
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- CB (Citizens Band Radio)
Two-way radio for which no license is required by the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC). Long beyond its heyday in the
'70s, CB is still used by truckers and motorists for everything
from traffic condition reports to emergency calls to idle chatter.
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- CDL (Commercial Driver's License)
License which authorizes an individual to operate commercial motor
vehicles and buses over 26,000 pounds gross vehicle weight. For
operators of freight-hauling trucks, the maximum size which may
be driven without a CDL is Class 6 (maximum 26,000 pounds gross
vehicle weight).
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- CE (CF, LP)
Distance from back of a truck's cab to the end of its frame.
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- CFC
Chlorofluorocarbon.
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- CG (Center of Gravity)
Weight center or balance point of an object, such as a truck body.
Calculated to help determine optimum placement of truck bodies
on chassis.
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- Chassis Weight (Curb Weight, Tare Weight)
Weight of the empty truck, without occupants or load.
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- CNG
- Compressed natural gas.
- COE
- See Cabover.
- COFC (Container On Flat Car)
- Method of moving shipping containers which
involves transporting them on railroad flat cars.
- Common Carrier
- Freight transportation company which serves
the general public. May be regular route service (over designated
highways on a regular basis) or irregular route (between various
points on an unscheduled basis).
- Compensated Intra corporate Hauling
- Freight transportation service provided
by one company for a sister company.
- Container (Shipping Container)
- Standard-sized rectangular box used to transport
freight by ship, rail and highway. International shipping containers
are 20 or 40 feet long, conform to International Standards Organization
(ISO) standards and are designed to fit in ships' holds. Containers
are transported on public roads atop a container chassis towed
by a tractor. Domestic containers, up to 53 feet long and of lighter
construction, are designed for rail and highway use only.
- Container Chassis
- Single-purpose semi trailer designed to
carry a shipping container.
- Contract Carrier
- Company that transports freight under contract
with one or a limited number of shippers.
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Converter Dolly (Dolly)
- Auxiliary axle assembly equipped with a
fifth wheel (coupling device), towed by a semi trailer and supporting
the front of, and towing, another semi trailer
- Cube (Cubic Capacity)
- Interior volume of a truck body, semi trailer
or trailer, measured in cubic feet.
- Curb Weight
- See Chassis Weight.
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- Dead-Heading
- Operating a truck without cargo.
- Demountable Rim
- Multi-piece steel wheel rim assembly which
is bolted to a spoke hub. Demountable rims are still in use, though
they have been replaced in many applications by the simpler disc
wheel. (see Cast Spoke Wheel)
- Disc Wheel
- Single-piece rim/wheel assembly of stamped
and welded steel or forged aluminum, anchored by 8 or 10 nuts
to a hub. A "Budd wheel" is a ten-hole, stud-piloted
disc wheel; a design originated by the Budd Corporation.
- Displacement (Piston Displacement)
- Sum of the volumes swept by an engine's
pistons as they travel up and down in their cylinders. Based upon
bore (diameter of cylinder) and stroke (distance traveled by piston).
Expressed in liters or cubic inches.
- Dolly
- See Converter
Dolly.
- DOT
- Department of Transportation.
- Doubles (Twins, Twin Trailers)
- Combination of a tractor and two semi trailers
connected in tandem by a converter dolly. (see Converter
Dolly; Pintle Hook)
- Driveline
- All the components which together transmit
power from the transmission to the drive axle(s). These consist
of at least one drive shaft (propeller shaft) with a universal
joint at each end.
- Drive train (Power train)
- All the components, excluding engine, which
transmit the engine's power to the rear wheels: clutch, transmission,
drive line and drive axle(s). (See Power
train)
- DRL (Daytime Running Lights)
- System that automatically turns on a vehicle's
low beam headlights when the parking brake is released and the
ignition is on.
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- EDI (Electronic Data Interchange)
- The business-to-business interconnection
of computers for the rapid exchange of a wide variety of documents,
from bills of lading to build tickets at auto plants.
- Escape Ramp
- See Runaway
Truck Ramp.
- Escrow
- Money placed with a third person with direction
to use it for a specific purpose, usually payment of taxes and
insurance.
- Exempt Carrier
- Company which transports commodities exempted
from Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) economic regulation.
- EV (Electric Vehicle)
- Vehicle powered by electric motor(s) rather
than by an internal combustion engine. Most common source of electricity
is chemical storage batteries.
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- Fifth Wheel
- Coupling device attached to a tractor or
dolly which supports the front of a semi trailer and locks it
to the tractor or dolly. The fifth wheel's center is designed
to accept a trailer's kingpin, around which the trailer and tract
or or dolly pivot in turns.
- Fixed Tandem
- Assembly of two axles and suspension that
is attached to the chassis in one place, and cannot be moved fore
and aft. (see Sliding Tandem)
- For-Hire Carrier
- Company in the business of transporting
freight belonging to others (see Private
Carrier).
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- GAWR (Gross Axle Weight Rating)
- Maximum weight an axle is rated to carry
by the manufacturer. Includes both the weight of the axle and
the portion of a vehicle's weight carried by the axle.
- GCW (Gross Combination Weight)
- Total weight of a loaded combination vehicle,
such as a tractor-semi trailer or truck and full trailer(s).
- Geared Speed
- Calculated vehicle speed at the engine's
governed rpm in each transmission gear, or (commonly) in top gear.
- Gear Ratio
- Number, usually expressed as a decimal fraction,
representing how many turns of the input shaft cause exactly one
revolution of the output shaft. Applies to transmissions, power
takeoffs, power dividers and rear axles. Example: If 2.5 revolutions
of an input shaft cause one revolution of the output shaft, the
gear ratio is 2.5:1.
- Grade
- Steepness of a grade, expressed as a percentage.
Example: A vehicle climbing a 5% grade rises 5 feet for every
100 feet of forward travel.
- Gradeability
- Vehicle's ability to climb a grade at a
given speed. Example: A truck with a gradeability of 5% at 60
mph can maintain 60 mph on a grade with a rise of 5%.
- GVW (Gross Vehicle Weight)
- Total weight of a vehicle and everything
aboard, including its load.
- GVWR (Gross Vehicle Weight Rating)
- Total weight a vehicle is rated to carry
by the manufacturer, including its own weight and the weight of
its load.
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- Hazmat
- Hazardous materials, as classified by the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). Transport of hazardous
materials is strictly regulated by the U.S. Department of Transportation.
- Headache Rack
- Heavy protective barrier mounted behind
the tractor's cab. Designed to prevent "headaches" caused
by load shifting forward from the trailer and crushing the cab.
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- HCFC
- Hydro chlorofluorocarbon.
- Horsepower (hp)
- Measure of power (the amount of work that
can be done over a given amount of time). One horsepower is defined
as 33,000 foot-pounds of work in one minute. Example: Lifting
33,000 pounds one foot in one minute, or lifting 3300 pounds ten
feet in one minute.
- Horsepower, Gross Laboratory
- Tested horsepower of a "bare"
engine without fan, water pump, alternator, exhaust system or
any other accessories.
- Horsepower, SAE Net
- Horsepower capability of an engine with
full accessories and exhaust system. Test procedures per standards
of Society of Automotive Engineers (SAE).
- Hours-Of-Service
- U.S. Department of Transportation safety
regulations which govern the hours of service of commercial vehicle
drivers engaged in interstate trucking operations.
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- Independent Trucker
- See Owner Operator.
- ITS (Intelligent Transportation Systems)
- Formerly called IVHS.
- IVHS (Intelligent Vehicle Highway Systems)
- Blanket term for a wide array of technologies,
including electronic sensors, computer hardware and software and
radio communications. The purpose of IVHS is to increase efficiency
of use of existing highways, reducing travel time, fuel consumption,
air pollution and accidents. There are five functional areas:
- Advanced Public Transportation Systems
(APTS)
- Advance Traffic Management Systems (ATMS)
- Advance Traveler Information Systems
(ATIS)
- Advanced Vehicle Control Systems (AVCS)
- Commercial Vehicle Operations (CVO)
A more recently coined term, Intelligent
Transportation Systems (ITS), encompasses both IVHS and modes
of transportation other than highway, such as rail. (see AVI,
AVL, WIM)
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- Jackknife
- To place the trailer at a very sharp angle
to the tractor.
- Jake Brake
- See Retarder.
- JIT (Just-In-Time)
- Manufacturing system which depends on frequent,
small deliveries of parts and supplies to keep on-site inventory
to a minimum.
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- Kingpin (axle)
- Pin around which a steer axle's wheels pivot.
- Kingpin (trailer)
- Anchor pin at the center of a semi trailer's
upper coupler which is captured by the locking jaws of a tractor's
fifth wheel to attach the tractor to the semi trailer
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- Landing Gear
- Retracting legs which support the front
of a semi trailer when it is not coupled to a tractor.
- LCV (Long Combination Vehicle)
- In general, vehicles longer than a standard
doubles rig (tractor and two 28-foot semi trailers). Examples
of LCVs which are permitted in some U.S. western states and eastern
toll roads: Twin 48-foot trailers; triple 28-foot trailers.
- Lessee
- Company or individual which leases vehicles.
- Lessor
- Company which leases vehicles.
- Lift Axle
- Extra, unpowered axle needed only when the
vehicle is loaded, allowing it to meet federal and state vehicle
weight standards. The lift axle is mounted to an air spring suspension
that raises the axle when it is not required.
- LPG
- Liquefied Petroleum Gas, e.g., Propane Butane.
- Load Range (Tires)
- Letter code system for the weight
carrying capacity of tires. Comparable ply ratings are shown below.
LR PR LR PR
A .... 2 E .... 10
B .... 4 F .... 12
C .... 6 G .... 14
D .... 8 H .... 16
(LR = Load Range PR = Ply Rating)
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- Logbook
- Book carried by truck drivers in which they
record their hours of service and duty status for each 24-hour
period. Required in interstate commercial trucking by the U.S.
Department of Transportation.
- Lowboy
- Open flat-bed trailer with a deck height
very low to the ground, used to haul construction equipment or
bulky or heavy loads.
- LTL (Less-Than-Truckload)
- A quantity of freight less than that required
for the application of a truckload (TL) rate; usually less than
10,000 pounds. (see TL)
- LTL Carrier
- Trucking company which consolidates less-than-truckload
cargo for multiple destinations on one vehicle. (see TL
Carrier)
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- On-Board Computer
- See Trip Recorder.
- Operating Authority
- “Operating authority” is the term used by
transportation regulatory agencies to describe a grant of legal
permission by a federal or state government to engage in for-hire
interstate (state-to-state) or intrastate (within a state) transportation
by motor vehicle. Essentially, it is a business license. Much
like a plumber needs to be licensed and insured, so too does a
trucker or mover (also called a motor carrier). In certain areas
called “Commercial Zones” no trucking license is needed if you
operate solely within the zone. However, if you are unlicensed
and you transport regulated commodities where one or both points
are outside the zone, you run the risk of being issued notices
of violation and having to pay substantial civil penalties.
Authority is broken down by type (“common”, “contract” and “broker”)
and commodity (“property except household goods”, “household goods”
and “passenger”). “Common” carriers are essentially companies
that are open to the public for hire. “Contract” carriers only
serve businesses with whom they have -- you guessed it -- a contract!
“Brokers” merely arrange for transportation but don’t actually
take possession of a shipment. General commodities are classified
as “Property Except Household Goods”, while the personal effects
of a homeowner are considered “Household Goods”. Most carriers
that operate bus companies or van services are required to have
“Passenger” authority. There is also 'freight forwarder' authority.
Freight Forwarders are essentially travel agents for freight who
arrange for motor carrier, ocean and/or air transportation to
get freight from Point A to Point B.
- Overdrive
- Gearing in which less than one revolution
of a transmission's input shaft causes one turn of the output
shaft. The purpose of overdrive is to reduce engine rpm in high
gear for better fuel economy. Example: A transmission with an
overdrive top gear has a ratio of 0.70 to one. Turning the input
shaft 0.7 revolutions causes 1.0 revolution of the output shaft.
- Owner-Operator
- Trucker who owns and operates his own truck(s).
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- P&D
- Pickup and delivery.
- Payload
- Weight of the cargo being hauled.
- Peddle Run
- Truck route with frequent delivery stops.
- Pigtail
- Cable used to transmit electrical power
from the tractor to the trailer. So named because it is coiled
like a pig's tail.
- Piggyback
- Semi trailer built with reinforcements to
withstand transport by a railroad flatcar. (see TOFC)
- Pintle Hook
- Coupling device used in double trailer,
triple trailer and truck-trailer combinations. It has a curved,
fixed towing horn and an upper latch that opens to accept the
draw bar eye of a trailer or dolly.
- Piston Displacement
- See Displacement.
- Ply Rating (PR)
- Relative measure of tire casing strength.
(see Load Range)
- Power train (Drive train)
- All the components, including engine, which
transmit the engine's power to the rear wheels: clutch, transmission,
drive line and drive axle(s).
- Private Carrier
- Business which operates trucks primarily
for the purpose of transporting its own products and raw materials.
The principle business activity of a private carrier is not transportation.
(see For-Hire Carrier)
- Process Agent
- When you apply for Interstate Authority,
you are required to have a process agent on file for all 50 states.
A process agent is merely someone with a bona fide place of business
in the state that will accept legal documents on your behalf and
forward them to you. When you apply for authority with DOTAuthority.com,
we arrange for our partner process agent service company to make
your required BOC-3 filing at no additional charge to you!
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- PSI (Pounds Per Square Inch)
- In trucking, unit of measurement for tire
air pressure, air brake system pressure and turbocharger boost.
- PTO (Power Takeoff)
- Device used to transmit engine power to
auxiliary equipment. A PTO often drives a hydraulic pump, which
can power a dump body, concrete mixer or refuse packer. Some designs
mount to a standard opening on the transmission, while others
attach at the front or rear of the engine.
- Pull Trailer
- Short, full trailer (supported by axles
front and rear) with an extended tongue.
- Pup Trailer
- Short semi trailer, usually between 26 and
32 feet long, with a single axle.
- Pusher Axle
- See Axle.
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- Relay (Relay Driving)
- Common practice in the less-than-truckload
industry, in which one driver takes a truck for 8 to 10 hours,
then turns the truck over to another driver, pony express style.
- Reefer
- Refrigerated trailer with insulated walls
and a self-powered refrigeration unit. Most commonly used for
transporting food.
- Retarder
- Device used to assist brakes in slowing
the vehicle. The most common type of retarder on over-the-road
trucks manipulates the engine's valves to create engine drag.
(This type is commonly referred to as "Jake Brake" because
the predominant manufacturer is Jacobs Vehicle Equipment Co.)
Other types of retarder's include exhaust retarder's, transmission-mounted
hydraulic retarder's and axle-mounted electromagnetic retarder's
- RFG (Reformulated Gasoline)
- Gasoline blended with pollution reducing
additives.
- RoadRailer
- Semi trailer specially designed to travel
both on highway and on rails. Manufactured by Wabash Corp.
- Rolling Radius
- Tire dimension from center of the axle to
the ground; measured with tire loaded to rated capacity. Used
in calculating geared speed.
- RPM (Revolutions Per Minute)
- Measure of the speed at which a shaft spins.
Most often used to describe engine crankshaft speed. Indicated
by a tachometer.
- Runaway Truck Ramp
- Emergency area adjacent to a steep downgrade
that a heavy truck can steer into after losing braking power.
Usually two or three lanes wide and several hundred feet long,
the ramp is a soft, gravel-filled pathway which absorbs the truck's
forward momentum, bringing it to a safe stop. Depending on the
surrounding terrain, the ramp may be level or run up or down hill.
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- Semi trailer
- Truck trailer supported at the rear by its
own wheels and at the front by a fifth wheel mounted to a tractor
or dolly.
- Setback Axle
- Front steering axle moved rearward from
the generally accepted standard position. Advantages: Shorter
turning radius and more of a vehicle's weight shifted to front
axle.
- Shipping Weight
- "Dry" weight of a truck including
all standard equipment, but excluding fuel and coolant.
- Single-Source Leasing
- Service in which companies can lease drivers
and trucks from the same source, rather than having to procure
them from different companies.
- Sleeper
- Sleeping compartment mounted behind a truck
cab, sometimes attached to the cab or even designed to be an integral
part of it.
- Sleeper Team
- See Team.
- Sliding Fifth Wheel
- Fifth wheel mounted to a mechanism that
allows it to be moved back and forth for the purpose of adjusting
the distribution of weight on the tractor's axles. Also provides
the capability to vary vehicle combination lengths.
- Sliding Tandem (Slider)
- Mechanism that allows a tandem axle suspension
to be moved back and forth at the rear of a semi trailer, for
the purpose of adjusting the distribution of weight between the
axles and fifth wheel.
- Speedability
- Top speed a vehicle can attain as determined
by engine power, engine governed speed, gross weight, drive line
efficiency, air resistance, grade and load.
- Spoke Wheel
- See Cast Spoke
Wheel.
- Spread Axle (Spread Tandem)
- Tandem axle assembly spaced further apart
than the standard spacing of 54 inches. The U.S. federal bridge
formula favors trailer axles with an eight or nine foot spread
by allowing higher weight than on tandems with standard spacing.
- Straight Truck
- See Truck.
- SUV
- Sport/utility vehicle.
- Synchronized Transmission
- Transmission with built-in mechanisms to
automatically "equalize" the speed of its gears to allow
smooth shifting without the need to double-clutch.
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- Tag Axle
- See Axle.
- Tare Weight
- See Chassis Weight.
- Tariff
- A tariff is a published listing of your
rates and charges and the rules that apply to the transportation
of a residential household goods shipment.
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- Tandem Axle (Tandems)
- Pair of axles and associated suspension
usually located close together. (see Spread
Axle)
- Team (Driver Team)
- Team of two drivers who alternative driving
and resting.
- TEU (Twenty-Foot Equivalent Unit)
- Standardized unit for measuring container
capacity on ships, railcars, etc.
- TL (Truckload)
- The quantity of freight required to fill
a trailer; usually more than 10,000 pounds. (see LTL)
- TL Carrier
- Trucking company which dedicates trailers
to a single shipper's cargo, as opposed to an LTL (Less Than Truckload)
carrier which transports the consolidated cargo of several shippers
and makes multiple deliveries. (see LTL
Carrier)
- TOFC (Trailer On Flatcar)
- Method of moving cargo which involves transporting
semi trailers on railroad flat cars. (see Piggyback)
- Tractor
- Truck designed primarily to pull a semi
trailer by means of a fifth wheel mounted over the rear axle(s).
Sometimes called a truck tractor or highway tractor to differentiate
from it from a farm tractor.
- Tractor Trailer
- Tractor and semi trailer combination.
- Tri-Axle
- Truck, tractor or trailer with three axles
grouped together at the rear. (see Tridem)
- Tridem
- Group of three axles on a truck, tractor
or trailer. Tridems are most common on European semi trailers
- Trip Leasing
- Leasing a company's vehicle to another transportation
provider for a single trip.
- Trip Recorder (On-Board Computer)
- Cab-mounted device which electronically
or mechanically records data such as truck speed, engine rpm,
idle time and other information useful to trucking management.
- Truck
- Vehicle which carries cargo in a body mounted
to its chassis, rather than on a trailer towed by the vehicle.
- Twins (Twin Trailers)
- See Doubles.
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- ULEV
- Ultra-low emissions vehicle.
- Upper Coupler
- Load bearing surface on the underside of
the front of a semi trailer It rests on the fifth wheel of a tractor
or dolly and has a downward-protruding kingpin which is captured
by the locking jaws of the fifth wheel.
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- VIN (Vehicle Identification Number)
- Assigned by the manufacturer, this number
is unique to each vehicle and appears on the vehicle's registration
and title.
- VMRS (Vehicle Maintenance Reporting Standards)
- Set of codes developed to facilitate computerized
tracking of parts and labor used in equipment repair. Established
and maintained by the American Trucking Associations.
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- Walking Beam Suspension
- Type of truck and tractor rear suspension
consisting of two beams, one at each side of the chassis, which
pivot in the center and connect at the front to one axle of a
tandem and at the rear to the other axle.
- Way bill
- Description of goods sent with a common
carrier freight shipment.
- WIM (Weigh-In-Motion)
- Technology for determining a vehicle's weight
without requiring it to come to a complete stop.
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- Yard Jockey
- Person who operates a yard tractor.
- Yard Tractor or Yard Goat
- Special tractor used to move trailers around
a terminal, warehouse, distribution center, etc.
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