Current through Register Vol. 48, No. 9, September 27, 2024
(a)
Tracking. When two or more vehicles are operated in combination, the coupling
devices connecting the vehicles shall be designed, constructed, and installed,
and the vehicles shall be designed and constructed, so that when the
combination is operated in a straight line on a level, smooth, paved surface,
the path of the towed vehicle will not deviate more than 3 inches to either
side of the path of the vehicle that tows it.
(b) Fifth wheel assemblies
(1) Mounting
(i) Lower half. The lower half of a fifth
wheel mounted on a truck tractor or converter dolly must be secured to the
frame of that vehicle with properly designed brackets, mounting plates or
angles and properly tightened bolts of adequate size and grade, or devices that
provide equivalent security. The installation shall not cause cracking,
warping, or deformation of the frame. The installation must include a device
for positively preventing the lower half of the fifth wheel from shifting on
the frame to which it is attached.
(ii) Upper half. The upper half of a fifth
wheel must be fastened to the motor vehicle with at least the same security
required for the installation of the lower half on a truck tractor or converter
dolly.
(2) Locking.
Every fifth wheel assembly must have a locking mechanism. The locking
mechanism, and any adapter used in conjunction with it, must prevent separation
of the upper and lower halves of the fifth wheel assembly unless a positive
manual release is activated. The release may be located so that the driver can
operate it from the cab. If a motor vehicle has a fifth wheel designed and
constructed to be readily separable, the fifth wheel locking devices shall
apply automatically on coupling.
(3) Location. The lower half of a fifth wheel
shall be located so that, regardless of the condition of loading, the
relationship between the kingpin and the rear axle or axles of the towing motor
vehicle will properly distribute the gross weight of both the towed and towing
vehicles on the axles of those vehicles, will not unduly interfere with the
steering, braking, and other maneuvering of the towing vehicle, and will not
otherwise contribute to unsafe operation of the vehicles comprising the
combination. The upper half of a fifth wheel shall be located so that the
weight of the vehicles is properly distributed on their axles and the
combination of vehicles will operate safely during normal operation.
(c) Towing of full trailers. A
full trailer must be equipped with a tow bar and a means of attaching the tow
bar to the towing and towed vehicles. The tow bar and the means of attaching it
must
(1) Be structurally adequate for the
weight being drawn;
(2) Be properly
and securely mounted;
(3) Provide
for adequate articulation at the connection without excessive slack at that
location; and
(4) Be provided with
a locking device that prevents accidental separation of the towed and towing
vehicles. The mounting of the trailer hitch (pintle hook or equivalent
mechanism) on the towing vehicle must include reinforcement or bracing of the
frame sufficient to produce strength and rigidity of the frame to prevent its
undue distortion.
(d)
Safety devices in case of tow bar failure or disconnection. Every full trailer
and every converter dolly used to convert a semitrailer to a full trailer must
be coupled to the frame, or an extension of the frame, of the motor vehicle
which tows it with one or more safety devices to prevent the towed vehicle from
breaking loose in the event the tow bar fails or becomes disconnected. The
safety device must meet the following requirements:
(1) The safety device must not be attached to
the pintle hook or any other device on the towing vehicle to which the tow bar
is attached. However, if the pintle hook or other device was manufactured prior
to July 1, 1973, the safety device may be attached to the towing vehicle at a
place on a pintle hook forging or casting if that place is independent of the
pintle hook.
(2) The safety device
must have no more slack than is necessary to permit the vehicles to be turned
properly.
(3) The safety device,
and the means of attaching it to the vehicles, must have an ultimate strength
of not less than the gross weight of the vehicle or vehicles being
towed.
(4) The safety device must
be connected to the towed and towing vehicles and to the tow bar in a manner
which prevents the tow bar from dropping to the ground in the event it fails or
becomes disconnected.
(5) Except as
provided in paragraph (d)(6), if the safety device consists of safety chains or
cables, the towed vehicle must be equipped with either two safety chains or
cables or with a bridle arrangement of a single chain or cable attached to its
frame or axle at two points as far apart as the configuration of the frame or
axle permits. The safety chains or cables shall be either two separate pieces,
each equipped with a hook or other means for attachment to the towing vehicle,
or a single piece leading along each side of the tow bar from the two points of
attachment on the towed vehicle and arranged into a bridle with a single means
of attachment to be connected to the towing vehicle. When a single length of
cable is used, a thimble and twin base cable clamps shall be used to form the
forward bridle eye. The hook or other means of attachment to the towing vehicle
shall be secured to the chains or cables in a fixed position.
(6) If the towed vehicle is a converter dolly
with a solid tongue and without a hinged tow bar or other swivel between the
fifth wheel mounting and the attachment point of the tongue eye or other hitch
device
(i) Safety chains or cables, when used
as the safety device for that vehicle, may consist of either two chains or
cables or a single chain or cable used alone;
(ii) A single safety device, including a
single chain or cable used alone as the safety device, must be in line with the
centerline of the trailer tongue; and
(iii) The device may be attached to the
converter dolly at any point to the rear of the attachment point of the tongue
eye or other hitch device.
(7) Safety devices other than safety chains
or cables must provide strength, security of attachment, and directional
stability equal to, or greater than, safety chains or cables installed in
accordance with paragraphs (d) (5) and (6).
(8) When two safety devices, including two
safety chains or cables, are used and are attached to the towing vehicle at
separate points, the points of attachment on the towing vehicle shall be
located equally distant from, and on opposite sides of, the centerline of the
towing vehicle. Where two chains or cables are attached to the same point on
the towing vehicle, and where a bridle or a single chain or cable is used, the
point of attachment must be on the longitudinal centerline of the towing
vehicle. A single safety device, other than a chain or cable, must also be
attached to the towing vehicle at a point on its longitudinal
centerline.