Get your tickets to THE BIG THING 2026!
For those traveling in British Columbia:I have never seen a state or federal codified law in reference to passenger vehicles (which non commercial trucks are) that addresses any legal penalty for exceeding the payload of a vehicle. I understand the numbers, I understand why they are there, and I understand that there are safety repercussions, but from a legal (not civil) standpoint, I have never seen a code section that addresses this.
I have seen many ways commercial vehicles can exceed loads etc, and I have seen the classification codes for passenger vehicles that limits them to certain classes to meet govt classifications etc. But not once have I seen the code section federal or otherwise that says an overloaded passenger vehicle is illegal and xyz arrest or fine is a penalty.
If anyone knows this code section I would love to read it.
So we have Canada that codifies the law and you pay a fine... Anything in the US..For those traveling in British Columbia:
As far as I know that's just BC. Not sure about the other Provinces or Territories.So we have Canada that codifies the law and you pay a fine... Anything in the US..
Back up a few sections and you'll find this:
" 2353. Weight limits. Except as provided in section 2355, the following gross vehicle weight limits apply to vehicles operating on a public way:
A. For a 2-axle vehicle, 34,000 pounds"
Section 2355 has a formula based on distance between axles. A 4Runner with a 9 foot wheelbase has a limit of 39,000 lbs.
Exactly, the Power Wagon may have the same 2500 frame but the Power Wagon is built for off road articulation. Trucks built to max out payload are not built to articulate.I hear a lot, in general, some say "changing suspension does not change GVWR..." or something to that effect.
If that were true, wouldn't a Power Wagon rate the same as a Tradesman 2500 rather then much lower? They list as 1/2 the payload. Same chassis & brakes I believe.
I guarantee EVERY state and province has a law like this. Often hard to find but it'll be there somewhere.
Nope! My Indiana family is over GVWR every time they take the Buick to Chik-fil.So only the Xoverland tacos and 4runners exceed that weight rating then.