Regarding axle weights, it seems most people here already have it figured out. With the tandems placed near the front of the body, and all our freight handling equipment carried ahead of the tandems, all freight will be loaded behind the tandems. Thus, the weight of the freight in the rear tends to reduce the weight on the steers. That is because the truck frame acts like a lever and the tandems like a fulcrum.
When the truck has no freight on board, we'd have to work hard to tip the steers over 12,000 lbs. With all fuel and water tanks full to the brim, all personal and freight-handling gear on board and both co-drivers seated in the cab, the steers scale under 12,000.
If we put one of the co-drivers in back and a 300-pound courier in the passenger seat, and carried a couple-dozen furniture pads from the back into the sleeper, we could go over 12,000. But the problem then would be the courier's freight. Its weight would tend to reduce the front axle weight.
If we went over 12,000 on the steers it would not be a problem. Rex is correct when he says, "Most states will allow 20000lbs on the steer axle IF the truck has the proper components (axle, springs, wheels, tires, etc.)to support the weight." Our truck does Thus, our front-axle weight limit is the manufacturer's GVWR of 14,600 lbs.
The manufacturer's GVWR on the tandems is 40,000 lbs (20,000 lbs each). But as a practical matter, the FHWA Bridge Formula limits the weight on the tandems to 34,000 lbs.
For those who are curious, the Bridge Formula is explained online at:
http://ops.fhwa.dot.gov/freight/publications/bridge_frm_wts/index.htm
Additional information is in The Rand McNally Motor Carriers' Road Atlas, available at most truck stops and some book stores. It includes sections entitled "North American Federal Weight and Size Limits," "Bridge Formula Table," and "State/Provincial Weight and Size Limits." The first two sections are online at:
http://www.randmcnally.com/pdf/tdm/Federal_Bridge.pdf
We could discuss payload scenarios at length but the short story is, this truck can easily accommodate the FedEx Custom Critical C-unit payload requirement of 5,000 lbs.
The above numbers apply to National Network roads. Off the network, we will find our way through the complex web of state and local truck routes, truck restrictions, commercial vehicle rules and axle weight limits; just as all other expediters do in all types of trucks and vans.
Regarding the choices we made in the truck (cab type, box size, axle configuration, sleeper features, etc.), each one is right for us; and each would likely be wrong for many other people. The reverse is also true. Of the thousands of choices thousands of expediters made for their trucks, the choices were right for them, but not for us.
That's OK. Numerous business and life styles are practiced in expediting. If there was a "right" truck out there, everyone would be driving it. Spec'ing a truck is a highly individualized process. We got the truck we wanted. 'Nuff said about that.
Moot said, "Maybe over the next couple of months you could share with us some of the decisions and rationale behind the specing of this truck."
I'm working on that piece now, but keep what I said above in mind. Spec'ing a truck is a highly individualized process. I've never advised anyone to buy a truck and I never will. However, I will be happy to share with others what many drivers shared with us; namely, their decisions and rationale behind the spec'ing of their trucks. That information was very useful to us. I hope our information will be useful to others.
Highway Star said, "The big bunk, small box has been done many times before. Having been done before, it is odd that it was'nt done right the first time."
Diane and I couldn't agree more. The vendor failures are explained in Jeff Jensen's article (See:
http://www.expeditersonline.com/artman/publish/New_expediter_truck.html).
It was no fun rejecting the first truck but it would have been less fun trying to make an illegal and undrivable truck work.
That was then. This is now.
The disappointments are behind us.
We are literally driving on!