Irving wrote:How many and at what locations do you have marker lights on your build? What size is your trailer? Orange or red marker lights? Using any reflectors rather than lights?
My travel trailer is 6 feet x 10 feet and 6 feet high. Right now I have 2 orange led lights for the lower front sides, 2 red led lights for the upper back sides and tail lights that also have lights on their sides. I have 4 orange reflectors that I plan to attach around the top. I also plan to use a third brake light.
I sometimes see trailers with a LOT of lights all over them. I wonder if I'm doing enough.
Do you really want it to look like a rolling Christmas Tree....
That CHP officer is wrong. The clearance lights are there to warn others that the vehicle is wider than normal. A narrow trailer or vehicle should not have them.GuitarPhotog wrote:My trailer is narrower than 80" but a CHP officer pulled me over and "recommended" that I add front and rear clearance lights, so I did.
Bogo wrote:That CHP officer is wrong. The clearance lights are there to warn others that the vehicle is wider than normal. A narrow trailer or vehicle should not have them.GuitarPhotog wrote:My trailer is narrower than 80" but a CHP officer pulled me over and "recommended" that I add front and rear clearance lights, so I did.
If you have wheels and fenders that stick out from the sides, I'd light them with marker lights at their widest extents.
As for the high middle tail light like cars have, I'd have one. It isn't required. I'd out it at a height appropriate for being seen by car drivers.
Dale M. wrote:Bogo wrote:That CHP officer is wrong. The clearance lights are there to warn others that the vehicle is wider than normal. A narrow trailer or vehicle should not have them.GuitarPhotog wrote:My trailer is narrower than 80" but a CHP officer pulled me over and "recommended" that I add front and rear clearance lights, so I did.
If you have wheels and fenders that stick out from the sides, I'd light them with marker lights at their widest extents.
As for the high middle tail light like cars have, I'd have one. It isn't required. I'd out it at a height appropriate for being seen by car drivers.
NO the CHP officer is correct.....
Go back to this site...
http://www.nhtsa.gov/cars/rules/standar ... rpstr.html
Go to this section....
BASIC EQUIPMENT REQUIRED ON ALL TRAILERS
And read items 3 & 4....
The 80 inch rules are under this header..
ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT FOR TRAILERS EXCEEDING THE FOLLOWING PARAMETERS
Dale
Dale M. wrote:Bogo wrote:That CHP officer is wrong. The clearance lights are there to warn others that the vehicle is wider than normal. A narrow trailer or vehicle should not have them.GuitarPhotog wrote:My trailer is narrower than 80" but a CHP officer pulled me over and "recommended" that I add front and rear clearance lights, so I did.
If you have wheels and fenders that stick out from the sides, I'd light them with marker lights at their widest extents.
As for the high middle tail light like cars have, I'd have one. It isn't required. I'd out it at a height appropriate for being seen by car drivers.
NO the CHP officer is correct.....
Go back to this site...
http://www.nhtsa.gov/cars/rules/standar ... rpstr.html
Go to this section....
BASIC EQUIPMENT REQUIRED ON ALL TRAILERS
And read items 3 & 4....
The 80 inch rules are under this header..
ADDITIONAL EQUIPMENT FOR TRAILERS EXCEEDING THE FOLLOWING PARAMETERS
Dale
TPMcGinty wrote:I have the standard lights that come with the trailer. More would have been nicer but I built on a budget.
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