CDL Practice Tests: Weight & Balance

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Question #653 (1 of 10)

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Ideally, where would you like the cargo's center of gravity located?

  • Centered between your drive axles and your trailer tandems.
  • Just slightly behind the tractor's drive axles
  • About 10 feet to the rear the center point of the trailer
  • Roughly centered between the steer axle and the trailer tandems
You'll want to have the cargo loaded into the trailer so that the center of gravity is centered between your drive axles and your trailer tandems.
If the center of gravity of the cargo is too far to the front or rear of the vehicle, it is entirely possible that you will not be able to get your axle weights legal without reloading the cargo itself.
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Question #625 (2 of 10)

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Which of the following techniques will not change the weight distribution across your axles?

  • Changing the weight distribution of the cargo along the length of the trailer
  • Raising the center of gravity height of the load
  • Adding or burning off fuel
  • Sliding your trailer tandems forward or backward

There are several ways to distribute or redistributing the overall weight of the vehicle across the different sets of axles. You will affect weight distribution by:

  • Changing the weight distribution of the cargo along the length of the trailer, or moving the cargo around after the truck has been loaded. This will distribute the weight mainly between your drive axles and trailer tandems
  • Sliding your trailer tandems forward or backward will redistribute the weight mainly between your drive axles and trailer tandems
  • Sliding your 5th wheel will redistribute the weight mainly between your steer axle and your drive axles
  • Adding or burning off fuel will mainly change the amount of weight on your steer axle and somewhat on your drive axles also, depending upon the placement of your fuel tanks.
If you move the center of gravity either toward the front or rear of the trailer, it will change the weight distribution across the axles. But raising or lowering the center of gravity of the load will not change its weight distribution across the axles.
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Question #642 (3 of 10)

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Which of the following will alter the gross vehicle weight?

  • Moving the cargo toward the rear of the trailer
  • Sliding the tractor 5th wheel
  • Adding more fuel to the tanks
  • Sliding the trailer tandems

The final key point to understand when it comes to weight transfer is that none of the methods of redistributing weight between the different sets of axles, including sliding your 5th wheel, sliding your tandems, or moving the cargo around will have any affect on your gross weight.

The only way to affect the gross vehicle weight would be to add or remove weight from the vehicle. Adding or burning off fuel, or adding or removing cargo would be two examples of ways to alter the gross vehicle weight.

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Question #664 (4 of 10)

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You weigh the truck immediately before and after fueling. Based on the following, determine what percentage of the weight goes to each set of axles:

Before fueling:
steer: 11,100, drives: 32,600, gross: 71,400
After fueling:
steer:11,850, drives: 32,850, gross: 72,400

  • 75% went on the steer axle
    25% went on the drive axles
  • 67% went on the steer axle
    33% went on the drive axles
  • 80% went on the steer axle
    20% went on the drive axle
  • 65% went on the steer axle
    35% went on the drive axles
To determine the percentage of fuel weight added to the steer axle, take the weight added to the steer axle, divide it by the total fuel weight added (determined by the change in the gross weight), and then multiply that times 100
To determine the percentage of fuel weight added to the steer axle, take the weight added to the steer axle (750 pounds), divide it by the total fuel weight added (1000 pounds), and then multiply that times 100

750/1000 = .75

.75 * 100 = 75% fuel weight to the steer tires

100% - 75% = 25% went on the drive axles.
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Question #641 (5 of 10)

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Which of the following has the greatest affect on the gross vehicle weight?

  • The position of the trailer's tandems
  • Moving the cargo toward the front or rear of the trailer
  • The position of the tractor's 5th wheel
  • None of these affect the gross vehicle weight at all
The final key point to understand when it comes to weight transfer is that none of the methods of redistributing weight between the different sets of axles, including sliding your 5th wheel, sliding your tandems, or moving the cargo around will have any affect on your gross weight.
The only way to affect the gross vehicle weight is to add or remove weight from the vehicle. The methods of weight transfer we've discussed will move weight from one area of the vehicle to another, but will not affect the gross weight of the vehicle itself.
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Question #643 (6 of 10)

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Sliding your trailer tandems toward the front or back of the vehicle will primarily change the weight distribution between which sets of axles?

  • The steer axle and the trailer tandems
  • The tractor's drive axles and the trailer tandems.
  • It only removes weight from the trailer tandems
  • The tractor's drive axles and the steer axle
Sliding your trailer tandems toward the front or back of the vehicle will primarily change the weight distribution between the tractor's drive axles and the trailer tandems.
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Question #674 (7 of 10)

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Sliding the 5th wheel will change the weight distribution almost exclusively between which sets of axles?

  • The steer axle and the trailer tandems
  • The steer axle and the drive axles
  • The steer axle is the only one affected by fuel
  • The drive axles and the trailer tandems
Sliding the 5th wheel will change the weight distribution almost exclusively between the steer axle and the drive axles.
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Question #648 (8 of 10)

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You receive a scale ticket and your drive axles are 32,200 and your trailer tandems are 35,100. Based upon the two most common tandem slider rail hole spacings, what is the minimum number of holes you would have to slide the tandems to get the weight legal, and in which direction?

  • 6 inch spacing - slide tandems forward 3 holes
    4 inch spacing - slide tandems forward 5 holes
  • 6 inch spacing - slide tandems back 2 holes
    4 inch spacing - slide tandems back 4 holes
  • 6 inch spacing - slide tandems back 3 holes
    4 inch spacing - slide tandems back 5 holes
  • 6 inch spacing - slide tandems forward 2 holes
    4 inch spacing - slide tandems forward 4 holes
The two main hole spacings you'll find are 4 inches and 6 inches. You can estimate that you will move 250 pounds per hole for 4 inch spacing, and 400 pounds per hole for 6 inch spacing.
With 35,100 pounds on the tandems you must move a minimum of 1,100 pounds off the trailer tandems. To shift weight off the trailer tandems and onto the drive axles, you slide the trailer tandems back toward the rear of the truck.

With 6 inch spacing you're moving 400 pounds per hole so you need to move 3 holes to shift a minimum of 1,100 pounds (400 x 3 = 1,200).

With 4 inch spacing you're moving 250 pounds per hole so you need to move 5 holes to shift a minimum of 1,100 pounds (250 x 5 = 1,250).
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Question #650 (9 of 10)

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You receive a scale ticket and your drive axles are 31,700 and your trailer tandems are 35,100. Based upon a trailer with 6 inch slider rail hole spacings, what is the minimum number of holes you would have to slide the tandems to get the weight legal, and what would the final weights be?

  • Slide tandems back 4 holes - 33,300 tandems - 33,100 drives
  • Slide tandems forward 4 holes - 33,300 tandems - 33,100 drives
  • Slide tandems forward 3 holes - 33,900 tandems - 32,900 drives
  • Slide tandems back 3 holes - 33,900 tandems - 32,900 drives
The two main hole spacings you'll find are 4 inches and 6 inches. You can estimate that you will move 250 pounds per hole for 4 inch spacing, and 400 pounds per hole for 6 inch spacing.
With 35,100 pounds on the trailer tandems you must move a minimum of 1,100 pounds off the trailer tandems. To shift weight off the trailer tandems and onto the drive axles, you slide the trailer tandems back toward the rear of the truck.

With 6 inch spacing you're moving 400 pounds per hole so you need to move 3 holes to shift a minimum of 1,100 pounds (400 x 3 = 1,200).

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Question #660 (10 of 10)

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What is the best way to determine what percentage of the weight of fuel will go to each set of axles?

  • Ask another driver what their numbers are
  • Simply go by the number of gallons of fuel each tank holds
  • Weigh the truck immediately before and after fueling, and do a simple calculation
  • The percentage is standardized amongst manufacturers and is the same for every truck
The best way to determine what percentage of your fuel will go to each set of axles is to weigh the truck immediately before and after fueling, and do a simple calculation
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About The Weight And Balance Section

This section was created by Trucking Truth to help people understand how to load cargo, scale the truck, and understand the laws about truck weight limits. These materials will not be on your written CDL exams but it is critical that every truck driver knows these materials.

Types Of Weight Limits

There are four basic weight limits: single axle, tandem axle, bridge formula, and gross vehicle. The Federal Standards are as follows:

  • 20,000 pounds single axle weight
  • 34,000 pounds tandem axle weight
  • 80,000 pounds gross vehicle weight
  • Bridge Formula Calculations

Why Do These Different Weight Limits Exist?

There are a long list of critical safety issues which require putting limitations on the gross weight, axle weights, the weight distribution across the length of a vehicle, and the weight distribution across a minimum number of axles.

  • Putting too much weight on a small area of the road surface can cause ruts, cracks, and potholes
  • Putting too much weight on a small area of a bridge surface can cause structural damage to the bridge
  • Too much weight on your steer axle can lead to a "heavy steering" feel and may cause the truck to react improperly to steering inputs
  • Not enough weight on your steer axle can lead to a loss of traction for your steer tires
  • Improper weight balance between your tractor drive tires and trailer tandems can lead to poor traction and an increased risk of jackknifing
  • Too much weight toward the back of the trailer can lead to a "pendulum effect", causing the rear of the trailer to sway back and forth while driving down the highway or jackknife going around a curve
  • Overloading a tire beyond it's maximum tire load capacity can cause tire damage and blowouts
  • Overloading the suspension system of the truck can cause damage to the suspension system which could easily lead to loss of control of the vehicle

So as you can see, it's critical in so many ways to make sure that we follow the weight limits in strict accordance with the law. It is incredibly dangerous to overload a vehicle or to have the weight improperly distributed across the axles.

Methods Of Weight Transfer

There are several ways to distribute the overall weight of the vehicle across the different sets of axles. You will affect weight distribution by:

  • Changing the weight distribution of the cargo along the length of the trailer, or moving the cargo around after loading the truth. This will distribute the weight mainly between your drive axles and trailer tandems
  • Sliding your trailer tandems forward or backward will redistribute the weight mainly between your drive axles and trailer tandems
  • Sliding your 5th wheel will redistribute the weight mainly between your steer axle and your drive axles
  • Adding or burning off fuel will mainly change the amount of weight on your steer axle and somewhat on your drive axles also, depending upon the placement of your fuel tanks.

Limitations On Weight Transfer

There are several factors that will reduce the amount of weight we can transfer between the different sets of axles on the truck:

  • Federal laws limit the maximum weight on any set of axles and the gross vehicle weight - 20,000 pounds single axle, 34,000 pound tandem axles, 80,000 pounds GVW
  • The bridge law formula limits the maximum amount of weight you can carry across any set of axles based upon the number of axles and the spacing between them (we'll discuss this formula soon).
  • The maximum legal length allowed between your trailer kingpin and your trailer tandems will limit how far back you can slide your tandems
  • The load rating of the tires you have will determine the maximum amount of weight allowed on any particular tire
  • The load rating of the suspension system will limit the amount of weight you can have on any axle

The Bridge Formula

bridge law formula and regulations for trucks

Congress enacted the Bridge Formula in 1975 to limit the weight-to-length ratio of a vehicle crossing a bridge. They accomplished this either by spreading weight over additional axles or by increasing the distance between axles.

The idea here was to prevent putting too much weight on a relatively small area, causing damage to the road surface and bridge structure. By requiring trucks to spread the weight across a longer distance and distributing the weight across more axles, you help prevent damage to the bridges and roadways.

Compliance with Bridge Formula weight limits is determined by using the following formula:

W = the overall gross weight on any group of two or more consecutive axles to the nearest 500 pounds.

L = the distance in feet between the outer axles of any group of two or more consecutive axles.

N = the number of axles in the group under consideration.

Altering The Weight Distribution

The primary factors which will affect the weight distribution across a truck's axles are:

  • The position of the trailer's tandems
  • The position of the tractor's 5th wheel
  • The overall weight of the cargo in the trailer and the horizontal (front-to-back) position of its center of gravity
  • The amount of fuel onboard and the placement of the fuel tanks

In the coming pages, we'll go through these one at a time and learn to apply each one individually. Later we'll put them all together and show you how to get your truck's weight distribution legal out on the highways, coast to coast, under any circumstances.

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