On-board scale
On-board scales are mobile weighing systems that have been integrated into a vehicle, such as a flatbed truck or semi-trailer. In the United States, such scales are used primarily as a self-check for weight compliance. Thus the operator can use the scale to determine the weight of the vehicle as it is loaded. This enables the operator to avoid penalties by complying with state weight laws, while still transporting the maximum allowable weight. Weight laws are based on safety considerations; in the United States, the Federal Highway Administration requires each state to certify its enforcement of weight laws. In addition, some states allow on-board scales approved under the National Type Evaluation Program (NTEP) to be considered legal for trade.
Benefits
The convenience of being able to weigh at the loading site is a key factor in the acceptance of on-board scales. Other factors include:- avoiding overweight penalties with consequent reduction of driver anxiety and thus greater driver retention;
- the ability to load knowledgably to the maximum permissible weight;
- eliminating costs associated with using an in-ground scale, including lost hours of service, scale fees, extra fuel costs to visit the scale, and driver wages;
- if the scale is equipped with a printer, the ability to provide a weight receipt to the customer;
- for scales connected to an on-truck computer network such as SAE J1939, the possibility of more efficient drivetrain performance based on current truck weight;
- for scales connected directly or via other on-vehicle devices to a wide area network, enhanced corporate ability to manage a fleet based on vehicle weights.
- avoiding vehicle damage arising from overloading;
- ability to audit pickup routes and set rates appropriately, by identifying customers who are overloading bins;
- establishing more efficient routes based on customer bin weight data.
History
On-board scales have been used on vocational trucks at least since 1985. Among the first industries to use these scales were logging operations, in which the difficulty of determining the weight of newly cut logs, with their varying density and moisture content, was problematic. Avoiding overweight tickets by weighing when loading the logs was the incentive for using these scales. As more states began more rigorously enforcing weight limits in the early 1990s, other vocational trucking industries, such as waste hauling and aggregate hauling, began to install on-board scales.In 1987, "On-Board Load Cell" received a US Patent. This system was based on the application of a strain gauge to a sensor mounted to a vehicle's frame. The measured strain is described as "being representative of the weight of the vehicle load." Two years later, in 1989, "A Vehicle Mounted Load Indicator System" received a US Patent. This system was based on the air pressure in a truck's air suspension. It relied on calibration and claimed an accurate reading of the weight of the carried load, transmitted to a readout. On-board scales using the technology described in this patent were first sold in 1991.
Already by 1995, the Society of Automotive Engineers was publishing a "History of On-Board Electronic Truck Scales and Future Design Trends". This review's abstract notes that newer on-board scale systems included calibration data in the load sensors, which would function as part of an on-truck computer network. Thus, a calibrated load sensor on a trailer or semi-trailer could be attached to any tractor that could receive the trailer sensor's weight transmission over the network. Acceptance of on-board scales increased to the point that in 2008, for instance, all thirteen comments from poultry growers and agricultural associations, concerning a proposed U. S. Department of Agriculture rule, requested that the Department "not permit the delivery of... feed for more than one grower on a single truck unless the truck has an on-board scale and weighing system, specifically when feed is taken from one farm directly to another."