My current truck is a 26t 30ft body long and 13ft 11" high Merc Actros sleeper , that’s only slightly smaller cab wise than our merc artic
Our MAN Tgs are 14ft
blue estate:
My current truck is a 26t 30ft body long and 13ft 11" high Merc Actros sleeper , that’s only slightly smaller cab wise than our merc artic
Our MAN Tgs are 14ft
ThI suppose its all good practice incase I ever go for my Class 1 licence. It shouldnt be that much of a jump.
blue estate:
My current truck is a 26t 30ft body long and 13ft 11" high Merc Actros sleeper , that’s only slightly smaller cab wise than our merc artic
Our MAN Tgs are 14ft
ThI suppose its all good practice incase I ever go for my Class 1 licence. It shouldnt be that much of a jump.
nope as most 26t are based on artic cab and chassis any way , I’m going for mine in September
Longest rigid you can get would be 12m as that’s the legal limit. In terms of weight, you won’t get more than 4 axles on a rigid unless we’re talking specialist stuff which is probably DSGO anyway. Off the top of my head, 4 axles gives a max weight of 28t.
Realistically, the biggest thing you can drive would be something like an FMX tipper, although I think the Mercs are a bit taller.
You can drive any rigid vehicle as long as you’re not towing a trailer that weighs more than 750kgs. That would be anything from a little transit through to a 10 axle mobile crane.
Nah, they’re alright, it’s only around town where it becomes an issue - and until you get used to it, you just straddle lanes to block cars off before you turn. The worst bit about them is not knocking over pedestrians when you’re parallel parking on a high street as you have to put the tail over the pavement - but I just avoid doing that anyway as you always get some tube walking behind you like you have eyes everywhere.
iomex:
Ah that’s interesting, I’d have thought there’s another cert for that, if not DSGO then something else.
Mobile cranes used to have some classification for driver licencing which let them be driven on a car licence.
That was changed a while back so now a goods vehicle licence is needed.
The normal maximum weight for a four axel goods vehicle is 32 tonnes, but some specialist vehicles, such as volumetric mixer trucks, can weigh more, such as 38 tonnes on a four axel truck chassis.