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File:Road train (25).jpg
A three-trailer livestock road train in Australia
File:Road train at Alice Springs on the way to Tennant Creek.jpg
An early road train at Alice Springs on the way to Tennant Creek, c. 1938–1948
File:Dowling 125.jpg
A diesel road train in Alice Springs, c. 1938–1939

A road train, also known as a land train or long combination vehicle (LCV) is a semi-trailer used to move road freight more efficiently than single-trailer semi-trailers. It consists of one semi-trailer or more connected together with or without a prime-mover.<ref name=definitions>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It typically has to be at least three trailers and one prime-mover. Road trains are often used in areas where other forms of heavy transport (freight train, cargo aircraft, container ship) are not feasible or practical.

HistoryEdit

Early road trains consisted of traction engines pulling multiple wagons. The first identified road trains operated into South Australia's Flinders Ranges from the Port Augusta area in the mid-19th century.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> They displaced bullock teams for the carriage of minerals to port and were, in turn, superseded by railways.

During the Crimean War, a traction engine was used to pull multiple open trucks.<ref name=Beavan-217>Template:Cite book</ref> By 1898 steam traction engine trains with up to four wagons were employed in military manoeuvres in England.<ref name=war-20>Template:Cite book</ref>

In 1900, John Fowler & Co. provided armoured road trains for use by the British Armed Forces in the Second Boer War.<ref name=Beavan-217/><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Lord Kitchener stated that he had around 45 steam road trains at his disposal.<ref name=wyatt-43>Template:Cite book</ref>

A road train devised by Captain Charles Renard of the French Engineering Corps was displayed at the 1903 Paris Salon. After his death, Daimler, which had acquired the rights, attempted to market it in the United Kingdom.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Four of these vehicles were successfully delivered to Queensland, Australia, before the company ceased production upon the start of World War I.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In the 1930s/40s, the government of Australia operated an AEC Roadtrain to transport freight and supplies into the Northern Territory, replacing the Afghan camel trains that had been trekking through the deserts since the late 19th century. This truck pulled two or three Template:Convert Dyson four-axle self-tracking trailers. At Template:Convert, the AEC was grossly underpowered by today's standards, and drivers and offsiders (a partner or assistant) routinely froze in winter and sweltered in summer due to the truck's open cab design and the position of the engine radiator, with its Template:Convert cooling fan, behind the seats.

File:Road train, Quilpie, c 1962.jpg
Livestock road train with Leyland truck in 1962

Australian Kurt Johannsen, a bush mechanic, is recognised as the inventor of the modern road train.<ref>View From The North – Episode Four: Roads North</ref> After transporting stud bulls Template:Convert to an outback property, Johannsen was challenged to build a truck to carry 100 head of cattle instead of the original load of 20. Provided with financing of about 2000 pounds and inspired by the tracking abilities of the Government roadtrain, Johannsen began construction. Two years later his first road train was running.<ref>BBC Worldwide, Jeremy Clarkson's Motorworld, Australian episode</ref>

Johannsen's first road train consisted of a United States Army World War II surplus Diamond-T tank carrier, nicknamed "Bertha", and two home-built self-tracking trailers. Both wheel sets on each trailer could steer, and therefore could negotiate the tight and narrow tracks and creek crossings that existed throughout Central Australia in the earlier part of the 20th century. Freighter Trailers in Australia viewed this improved invention and went on to build self-tracking trailers for Kurt and other customers, and went on to become innovators in transport machinery for Australia.

This first example of the modern road train, along with the AEC Government Roadtrain, forms part of the huge collection at the National Road Transport Hall of Fame in Alice Springs, Northern Territory.

In 2023, Janus launched the first BEV triple road train with 620 kWh battery, also the world's heaviest street-legal BEV truck at 170 tonnes (gross weight).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

UsageEdit

AustraliaEdit

File:Australian road train headed by Volvo NH15.jpg
A four-trailer road train in the Australian outback with a Volvo NH15 prime mover

The term road train is used in Australia and typically means a prime mover hauling two or more trailers, other than a B-double.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In contrast with a more common semi-trailer towing one trailer or semi-trailer, the diesel prime mover of a road train hauls two or more trailers or semi-trailers. Australia has the longest and heaviest road-legal road trains in the world, weighing up to Template:Convert.<ref name=definitions/>

Double (two-trailer) road train combinations are allowed on some roads in most states of Australia, including specified approaches to the ports and industrial areas of Adelaide, South Australia<ref name="RAVnet"/> and Perth, Western Australia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> An A-double road train should not be confused with a B-double, which is allowed access to most of the country and in all major cities.<ref name="Hema Maps 2007">Hema Maps (Firm) & Martin, Ray. & Martin, Will. (2007), Australia truckies atlas [cartographic material] : the complete atlas for the professional driver / Hema Maps; [cartography, Ray Martin and Will Martin] – Template:ISBN Template:ISBN – has state by state routes and route restrictions I</ref>

In South Australia, B-triples up to Template:Convert and two-trailer road trains to Template:Convert were only permitted to travel on a small number of approved routes in the north and west of the state, including access to Adelaide's north-western suburban industrial and export areas such as Port Adelaide, Gillman and Outer Harbour via Salisbury Highway, Port Wakefield Road and Augusta Highway before 2017.<ref name="RAVnet">Template:Cite map</ref> A project named Improving Road Transport for the Agriculture Industry added Template:Convert of key routes permitted to operate vehicles over Template:Cvt in 2015–2018.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Triple (three-trailer) road trains operate in western New South Wales, western Queensland, South Australia, Western Australia and the Northern Territory, with the last three states also allowing AB-quads (B double with two additional trailers coupled behind). Darwin is the only capital city in the world where triples and quads are allowed to within Template:Convert of the central business district (CBD).<ref name="Hema Maps 2007"/>

Strict regulations regarding licensing, registration, weights, and experience apply to all operators of road trains throughout Australia.

Road trains are used for transporting all manner of materials: common examples are livestock, fuel, mineral ores, and general freight. Their cost-effective transport has played a significant part in the economic development of remote areas; some communities are totally reliant on regular service.

When road trains get close to populated areas, the multiple dog-trailers are unhooked, the dollies removed and then connected individually to multiple trucks at "assembly" yards.

When the flat-top trailers of a road train need to be transported empty, it is common practice to stack them. This is commonly referred to as "doubled-up" or "doubling-up". Sometimes, if many trailers are required to be moved at one time, they will be triple-stacked, or "tripled-up".

Higher Mass Limits (HML) Schemes are now in all jurisdictions in Australia, allowing trucks to carry additional weight beyond general mass limits. Some roads in some states regularly allowing up to 4 trailers at Template:Convert long and Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> On private property like mines, highway restrictions on trailer length, weight and count may not apply. Some of the heaviest road trains carrying ore are multiple unit with a diesel engine in each trailer, controlled by the tractor.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Diesel sales in Australia (per year) are around 32 billion litres,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> of which some is used by road trains. In order to reduce emissions and running cost, trials are made with road trains powered by batteries.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

United StatesEdit

Template:See also

File:Permitted Longer Combination Vehicles on the National Highway System 2017 22Oct2018.png
Permitted routes for longer combination vehicles on the U.S. National Highway System: 2017

In the United States, trucks on public roads are limited to two trailers (two Template:Convert and a dolly to connect; the limit is Template:Convert end to end). Some states allow three Template:Convert trailers, although triples are usually restricted to less populous states such as Idaho, Oregon, and Montana, plus the Ohio Turnpike<ref>"Truck Driver's Guide Book"</ref> and Indiana East–West Toll Road. Triples are used for long-distance less-than-truckload freight hauling (in which case the trailers are shorter than a typical single-unit trailer) or resource hauling in the interior west (such as ore or aggregate). Triples are sometimes marked with "LONG LOAD" banners both front and rear. "Turnpike doubles"—tractors towing two full-length trailers—are allowed on the New York Thruway and Massachusetts Turnpike (Interstate 90), Florida's Turnpike, Kansas Turnpike (Kansas City – Wichita route) as well as the Ohio and Indiana toll roads.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Colorado allows what are known as "Rocky Mountain Doubles" which is one full length Template:Convert trailer and an additional Template:Convert trailer. The term "road train" is not commonly used in the United States; "turnpike train" has been used, generally in a pejorative sense.<ref>"Gangway! Here comes a turnpike train!", The Times-News (Hendersonville, N.C.), 30 November 1960, p. 7.</ref>

In the western United States LCVs are allowed on many Interstate highways. The only LCVs allowed nationwide are STAA doubles.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

On private property like farms, highway restrictions on trailer length and count do not apply. Bales of straw, for example, are sometimes moved in wagon trains of up to 20 trailers an eighth of a mile long (carrying a total of 3,600 bales).<ref name="farmshow">Template:Cite book</ref>

EuropeEdit

File:A B-double unloading timber at Pellets Asturias, Tineo, on 7 Nov 2019.jpg
Timber being unloaded from a B-double at Pellets Asturias, Spain

In Finland, Sweden, Germany, the Netherlands, Denmark, Belgium, and some roads in Norway, trucks with trailers are allowed to be Template:Convert long.<ref>Template:Cite press release</ref> In Finland, a length of Template:Convert has been allowed since January 2019. In Sweden, this length has been allowed on several major roads, including all of E4, since August 2023.<ref>Longer trucks next year</ref> 34.5 meters allows two 40 foot containers.

Elsewhere in the European Union, the limit is Template:Convert (Norway Template:Convert). The trucks are of a cab-over-engine design, with a flat front and a high floor, about Template:Convert above ground. The Scandinavian countries are less densely populated than the other EU countries, and distances, especially in Finland and Sweden, are long. Until the late 1960s, vehicle length was unlimited, giving rise to long vehicles to cost effectively handle goods. As traffic increased, truck lengths became more of a concern and they were limited, albeit at a more generous level than in the rest of Europe.

In the United Kingdom in 2009, a two-year desk study of Longer Heavier Vehicles (LHVs), including up to 11-axle, Template:Convert long, Template:Convert combinations, ruled out all road-train-type vehicles for the foreseeable future.

File:40 foot container turnpike double 2.jpg
40 foot container turnpike double

In 2010, Sweden was performing tests on log-hauling trucks, weighing up to Template:Convert and measuring Template:Convert and haulers for two 40 ft containers, measuring Template:Convert in total.<ref>The next environmental improvement – Long truck rigs Volvo Trucks Magazine 3 October 2008</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In 2015, a pilot began in Finland to test a 104-tonne timber lorry which was Template:Convert and had 13 axles. Testing of the special lorry was limited to a predefined route in northern Finland<ref>Largest lorry in western Europe to start operating in Finnish Lapland</ref><ref>104 ton experiment in northern Finland</ref>

Since 2015, Spain has permitted B-doubles with a length of up to Template:Convert and weighing up to 60 tonnes to travel on certain routes.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In July 2024, after 5 years of testing, HCTs have been permitted on Spanish territory, with lengths of up to 32 meters (105 ft) and 70 gross tonnes.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Since 2016, Eoin Gavin Transport, Shannon and Dennison Trailers, Kildare have been trialling Template:Convert B-doubles on the Irish motorways.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In Feb 2024, The Pallet Network announced four B-doubles to operate between Dublin, Cork and Galway.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In 2020, a small number of road trains were operating between Belgium and the Netherlands.

MexicoEdit

In Mexico road trains exist in a limited capacity due to the sizes of roads in its larger cities, and they are only allowed to pull 2 trailers joined with a pup or dolly created for this purpose. RecentlyTemplate:When the regulations tend to be more severe and strict to avoid overloading and accidents, to adhere to the federal rules of transportation. Truck drivers must obtain a certificate to certify that the driver is capable to manipulate and drive that type of vehicle.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

All the tractor vehicles that make road train type transport in the country (along with the normal security requirements) need to have visual warnings like;<ref name=":0" />

  • "Warning Double Semi-Trailer" (Template:Langx) alert located in the frontal fenders of the tractor and in the rear part of each trailer,
  • yellow turn and warning lights to be more visible to other drivers,
  • a seal for the entire vehicle approving the use as double semi trailer,
  • federal license plates in every trailer, dolly, and tractor unit.

Some major cargo enterprises in the country use this form to cut costs of carrying all type of goods in some regions where other forms of transportation are too expensive compared to it due to the difficult geography of the country.<ref>Notice of regulation https://www.elmananerodiario.com/los-doble-remolque-no-se-prohiben-tendran-regulacion-mas-estricta/</ref>

The Mexican road train equivalent form in Australian Standard is the A-Double form, the difference is that the Mexican road trains can be hauled with a long distance tractor truck.

ZimbabweEdit

In Zimbabwe, they are only used in one highway, Ngezi – Makwiro road. They make use of 42 m long road trains pulling three trailers.

IndiaEdit

On 15th February 2025 Volvo Trucks India and Delhivery a Gurgaon based logistics company unveiled India's first road train consisting of a Volvo FM 420 4x2 tractor and a B-Double combination of 24 ft lead trailer and 44 ft semi-trailer coupled via fifth wheel making total length of vehicle close to 80 ft. With approvals from Ministry of Road Transport and Highways (MORTH) and Automotive Research Association of India (ARAI). Currently, road trains are only permitted to operate on Mumbai-Nagpur Expressway.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Trailer arrangementsEdit

File:Aust config2.png
Road train types:
A: B-double
B: B-triple
C: A-double
D: AB-triple (possible BA)
E: BAB quad
F: ABB quad
G: A-triple
H: AAB quad (possible BAA)
K: Special Australian mining tipper road train with limited transportation

A-doubleEdit

File:Ube Industries Ube Mine Expressway.jpg
A Kenworth with A-double chemical carrying trailers on a UBE Industries mining expressway in Japan
File:MAN TGS, Nullarbor, 2017 (01).jpg
A MAN with A-double in Australia

An A-double consists of a prime mover towing a normal lead trailer with a towing hitch such as a Ringfeder coupling affixed to it at the rear. A fifth wheel dolly is then affixed to the hitch allowing another standard trailer to be attached. Eleven-axle coal tipping sets carrying to Port Kembla, Australia are described as A-doubles. The set depicted has a tare weight of Template:Cvt and is capable of carrying Template:Cvt of coal.<ref>Muscat Trailer website</ref> Note the shield at the front of the second trailer to direct tipped coal from the first trailer downwards.

Pros include the ability to use standard semi-trailers and the potential for very large loads. Cons mainly include very tricky reversing due to the multiple articulation points across two different types of coupling.

B-doubleEdit

File:Lindsay Transport B-Double.jpg
A B-double parked at a truck stop in New South Wales, Australia
File:Truck Spotting on the A58 E312 Direction Kruiningen-Netherlands 17 04 2020. (49784067867).jpg
A 25.25 metre B-double consisting of two trailers with the same length in the Netherlands

A B-double consists of a prime mover towing a specialised lead trailer that has a fifth-wheel mounted on the rear towing another semi-trailer, resulting in two articulation points. It may also be known as a B-train, interlink in South Africa, B-double in Australia, tandem tractor-trailer, tandem rig or double in North America. They may typically be up to Template:Cvt long. The fifth wheel coupling is located at the rear of the lead (first) trailer and is mounted on a "tail" section commonly located immediately above the lead trailer axles.<ref name="code">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In North America this area of the lead trailer is often referred to as the "bridge". The twin-trailer assembly is hooked up to a tractor unit via the tractor unit's fifth wheel in the customary manner.

An advantage of the B-train configuration is its inherent stability when compared to most other twin trailer combinations, the turntable mounted on the forward trailer results in the B-train not requiring a converter dolly as with all other road train configurations.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It is this feature above all else that has ensured its continued development and global acceptance.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Reversing is simpler as all articulation points are on fifth wheel couplings.

B-train trailers are used to transport many types of load and examples include tanks for liquid and dry-bulk, flat-beds and curtain-siders for deck-loads, bulkers for aggregates and wood residuals, refrigerated trailers for chilled and frozen goods, vans for dry goods, logging trailers for forestry work and cattle liners for livestock.

In Australia, standard semi-trailers are permitted on almost any road. B-doubles are more heavily regulated, but routes are made available by state governments for almost anywhere that significant road freight movement is required.<ref name="RAVNet SA"/>

Around container ports in Australia exists what is known as a super B-double; a B-double with an extra axle (total of 4) on the lead trailer and either three or four axle set on the rear trailer. This allows the super B-Double to carry combinations of two 40 foot containers, four 20 foot containers, or a combination of one 40 foot container and two twenty foot containers. However, because of their length and low accessibility into narrow streets, these vehicles are restricted in where they can go and are generally used for terminal-to-terminal work, i.e. wharf to container holding park or wharf-to-wharf. The rear axle on each trailer can also pivot slightly while turning to prevent scrubbing out the edges of the tyres due to the heavy loads placed on them.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

B-tripleEdit

Same as B-double, but with an additional lead trailer behind the prime mover.<ref>COAG backs B-triple network Template:Webarchive, ntc.gov.au</ref> The B-train principle has been exploited in Australia, where configurations such as B triples, double-B doubles and 2AB quads are permitted on some routes. These are run in most states of Australia where double road trains are allowed. Australia's National Transport Commission proposed a national framework for B-triple operations that includes basic vehicle specifications and operating conditions that the commission anticipates will replace the current state-by-state approach, which largely discourages the use of B-triples for interstate operation.<ref name=trr>Template:Cite journal</ref> In South Australia, B-triples up to Template:Convert and two-trailer road trains to Template:Convert are generally only permitted on specified routes, including access to industrial and export areas near Port Adelaide from the north.<ref name="RAVNet SA"/>

B quadEdit

In 2018, B quad was also allowed in states Victoria, New South Wales and Queensland, which enables more economical transport.<ref>VIC transport operation reports breakthrough efficiencies with PBS B-quad combination primemovermag.com.au, 15 March 2019</ref>

AB tripleEdit

An AB triple consists of a standard trailer with a B-Double behind it using a converter dolly, with a trailer order of Standard, Dolly, B-Train, Standard. The final trailer may be either a B-Train with no trailer attached to it or a standard trailer. Alternatively, a BA triple sees this configuration reversed, consisting of a B-double with a converter dolly and standard trailer behind it.

A-tripleEdit

File:Road train (2).jpg
A-triple as tanker hauler

In South Australia, larger road trains up to Template:Convert (three full trailers) are only permitted on certain routes in the Far North.<ref name="RAVNet SA">Template:Cite map</ref>

BAB quadEdit

A BAB quad consists of two B-double units linked with a converter dolly, with trailer order of Prime Mover, B-Train, Dolly, B-Train.

ABB quadEdit

ABB quad consists of one standard trailer and B-triple units linked with a converter dolly.

AAB quadEdit

AAB quad consists of A-double and B-double units linked with a converter dolly. Alternatively, a BAA quad sees this configuration reversed, first the B-double, then the A-double.

A quadEdit

In some parts of Australia, 'super quad' road trains up to Template:Convert are permitted, consisting of four standard trailers connected via three converter dollies.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

C-trainEdit

A C-train is a semi-trailer attached to a turn table on a C-dolly. Unlike in an A-Train, the C-dolly is connected to the tractor or another trailer in front of it with two drawbars, thus eliminating the drawbar connection as an articulation point. One of the axles on a C-dolly is self-steerable to prevent tire scrubbing. C-dollies are not permitted in Australia, due to the lack of articulation.

Dog-trailer (dog trailer)Edit

File:Quad dog trailer.jpg
Quad dog trailer

A dog-trailer (also called a pup) is a short trailer with a permanent dolly, with a single A-frame drawbar that fits into the Ringfeder or pintle hook on the rear of the truck or trailer in front, giving the whole unit two or more articulation points and very little roll stiffness. These are commonly used in Australia, particularly for end tipper applications like shown above. They are normally limited to a single dog trailer behind a short bodied (independently load carrying) truck with a standard length limit of 19 metres (20 under design permits). A quad dog trailer in combination with a bodied truck is able to carry more weight than a truck and single semi-trailer of the same length limit and access restrictions, as well as carrying two different materials as separate loads, such as with tipper bodies and fluid tankers.

Interstate road transport registration in AustraliaEdit

File:Australian Road Train.jpg
Versions of Australian road trains

In 1991, at a special Premiers' Conference, Australian heads of government signed an inter-governmental agreement to establish a national heavy vehicle registration, regulation and charging scheme: the Federal Interstate Registration Scheme (FIRS).<ref>Interstate Road Transport Charge Amendment Bill 1998 (Bills Digest 192 1997–98)</ref> Its requirements are as follows:Template:Bulleted list

Due to the "eastern" and "western" mass limits in Australia, two different categories of registration were enacted. The second digit of the registration plate showed what mass limit was allowed for that vehicle. If a vehicle had a 'V' as the second letter, its mass limits were in line with the eastern states mass limits, which were:

If a vehicle had an X as the second letter, its mass limits were in line with the western states mass limits, which were:

The second digit of the registration being a T designates a trailer.

One of the main criteria of the registration is that intrastate operation is not permitted. The load has to come from one state or territory and be delivered to another. Many grain carriers were reported and prosecuted for cartage from the paddock to the silos. However, if the load went to a port silo, they were given the benefit of the doubt, as that grain was more than likely to be going overseas.

SignageEdit

Template:Multiple image

File:Roe Hwy 140723 gn-07.jpg
Single dolly behind a trailer

Australian road trains have horizontal signs front and back with Template:Convert high black uppercase letters on a reflective yellow background reading "ROAD TRAIN". The sign(s) must have a black border and be at least Template:Convert long and Template:Convert high and be placed between Template:Convert and Template:Convert above the ground on the fore or rearmost surface of the unit.

In the case of B-triples in Western Australia, they are signed front and rear with "ROAD TRAIN" until they cross the WA/SA border where they are then signed with "LONG VEHICLE" in the front and rear.

Converter dollies must have a sign affixed horizontally to the rearmost point, complying to the same conditions, reading "LONG VEHICLE". This is required for when a dolly is towed behind a trailer.

Combination lengthsEdit

B-double
Template:Convert max. Western Australia, Template:Convert max.
B-triple
up to Template:Convert max.
NTC modular B-triple
Template:Convert max. (uses 2× conventional B-double lead trailers)
Pocket road train
Template:Convert max. (Western Australia only) This configuration is classed as a "Long Vehicle".
Double road train or AB road train
Template:Convert max.
Triple and ABB or BAB-quad road trains
Template:Convert max.

Operating weightsEdit

Operational weights are based on axle group masses, as follows:

Single axle (steer tyre)
Template:Convert
Single axle (steer axle with 'super single' tyres)
Template:Convert
Single axle (dual tyres)
Template:Convert
Tandem axle grouping
Template:Convert
Tri-axle grouping
Template:Convert

Therefore,

  • A B-double (single axle steering, tandem drive, and two tri-axle groups) would have an operational weight of Template:Convert.
  • A double road train (single axle steering, tandem drive, tri-axle, tandem, tri-axle) would have an operational weight of Template:Convert.
  • A triple is Template:Convert.
  • Quads weigh in at Template:Convert.
  • Concessional weight limits, which increase allowable weight to accredited operators<ref name="concession">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> can see (for example) a quad weighing up to Template:Convert.

  • If a tri-drive prime mover is utilised, along with tri-axle dollies, weights can reach nearly Template:Convert.

Speed limitsEdit

The Australian national heavy vehicle speed limit is Template:Convert, except New South Wales and Queensland where the speed limit for any road train is Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> B triple road trains have a speed limit of 100 km/h (62 mph) in Queensland.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

In Canada, there has been no difference between the speed limits between cars and road trains, which range from Template:Convert on two-lane roads and between Template:Convert on three-lane roads.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

In Europe, the speed limit for heavy goods trucks is usually Template:Convert. There is a law on having speed limiters which makes it impossible to drive heavy trucks faster than Template:Convert.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> These limits are normally the same for road trains. There is not a wish to encourage trucks to overtake slightly slower trucks on motorways because it obstacles the left lane, although common anyway e.g. when heavy road trains lose speed uphill.

World's longest road trainsEdit

File:Road Train Australia.jpg
Shell Australia BAA quad tanker road train in the Northern Territory. Trailer arrangement is B-double towing two tri-axle trailers.

Below is a list of longest road trains driven in the world. Most of these had no practical use, as they were put together and driven across relatively short distances for the express purpose of record-breaking.

|CitationClass=web }}</ref> semi-trailers, Template:Convert and Template:Convert long, pulled the load Template:Convert to recapture the record for the longest road train (multiple loaded trailers) ever pulled with a single prime mover. It was on the main road of Clifton, Queensland, that 70-year-old John Atkinson claimed a new record, pulled by a tri-drive Mack Titan.<ref>Australia's New World Record Road Train Pull, thedieselgypsy.com</ref><ref>Qld truck driver sets world's longest road train record, 19 February 2006, ABC News.</ref><ref>Bulldog Reclaims Record Down Under, macktrucks.com</ref>

Outside AustraliaEdit

  • On 12 April 2016 in Gothenburg, Sweden, a Volvo FH16 750 pulled 20 trailers with double-stacked containers with a total length of 300 meters (984 ft) and with a total weight of 750 tonnes.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

|CitationClass=web }}</ref>

GalleryEdit

See alsoEdit

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ReferencesEdit

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External linksEdit

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