Hello from jamaica 🇯🇲 When it comes on to different varieties of different trucks no country on earth comes close to New Zealand beautiful country filled with beautiful people and trucks
I still get a little intimated a liitle in awe of these big beast when travelling on the open road, especially our windy hilly roads. 70s was a thing for us kids to do the truckie wave when approaching an oncoming truckie and being rewarded when the truckies waved back was a buzz but if the truckie blew their horn it was the icing on the cake. Great driving awesome video. Respect to the truckies out there
Mad trucks. I just came back from Coffs Harbour on the NSW North Coast. I sat on the second level of the hospital watching rigs of all sizes going past all day non-stop. Our eldest son lives there with his whanau. I used to live there in 1982. It's a 6 hour lag from Sydney where I live today on King Georges Rd Roselands. I watch trucks all day from my 3rd level balcony, as King Georges Rd is 3 lanes in both directions. Originally from Motiti Island in the BOP.
Regards from Finland! Interesting to watch this from the practically opposite place on the planet. Your truck/trailer combinations are pretty similar to ours. Here the total weight of a 9-axle combination like the one at 1:40 is allowed to be 76 tons on public roads that don't have local weight limits. A "normal" full trailer combination can be up to 28m but a so called HCT (High Capacity Transport) combinations can be up to 34.5m long. The biggest difference is that we have almost no American "big rigs" here. Volvo and Scania dominate with more than 70% of the market of big trucks. Most of the rest are Mercedes, Man, Daf, Iveco and our own Sisu.
Here the 'normal' limit is 8.2T per twin-tyred axle, and a total of 50T for the vehicle at 1:40 (it's probably what we call a 50MAX as it has 9 axles). There are also 'HPMV' (high productivity motor vehicle) permits that are allowed more on certain route - I think 53T? HPMVs are confusing. For 76T, I'm guessing axle limits are 6T for the singles, and 9T for the twins? Pretty interesting as pavement wear is the 4th power of weight, in other words 9T axles wear the pavement 45% more than 8.T axles do.
@@Erelyes Those weight limits are a paragraph jungle. I am not a commercial truck driver and I took my driving license in 1977. A lot of things have changed since then. I don't know all about the rules today. It's about the distance between the axles and if the axles have single or twin wheels. The maximum weight for a 2-axle truck is 18 tons. I guess it's 10 tons for an axle with twin tires and 8 tons for an axle with single tires. I tried to give you a link but obviously it isn't possible.
Here in N.Z the max weight limit for trucks on public roads without a permit is 44 tonnes. Trucks that display the yellow backed "H" decals have permits which allow them to exceed the max weight limit. With the right type of permit these trucks have a total max weight limit of 62 tonnes. Trucks with permits have to operate under specific routes issued by the RCA (Road Controlling Authority), which include roads and bridges that are certified to accommodate for the additional mass and/or length of these trucks (In simple terms, these trucks are required to only operate on our State Highway network). Additionally, N.Z also has what is called "off-highway trucks" which operate on private backroads. These units are only used to cart large amounts of logs between logging sites. Many of these units have 2 full trailers attached together, some even have 3 full trailers. These off-highway trucks can weigh up to as much as 120 tonnes all up. By definition these units could technically be classed as Australian Road-Trains. The 4 axel configuration is our most common setup for both rigid units & tractor units. For our trailers the number of axels range anywhere from 2-7 depending on trailer type (2-4 axels for semi trailers, 3-5 axels for full trailers, & 5-7 axels for B-Trains). The largest units we run on our highways are called "Super B-Trains" which are larger than a standard B-Train. These units have a total of 11 axels (including the tractor). Most of the units on our highways however have a total of 8-9 axels, and will typically haul around 50 tonnes. The extra tires help keep our poor quality roads in better condition for longer. Our max length limit is 23 meters, however special types of trucks, such as car transporters & Super B-Trains, are allowed to be 24.5 meters long. The "American" trucks in N.Z & Australia are specially made for our conditions (they're essentially just beefed up versions of the U.S models). American truck brands such as Kenworth, Mack, Freightliner, Western Star, are either built or re-manufactured in Australia for this part of the world. N.Z recieves all these Australian spec'd American trucks in addition to one other American brand, International/Navistar trucks, which are built right here in N.Z exclusively for us. Kenworth also happens to be one of our most popular truck brands here in N.Z, they're especially popular among our logging industry, with both on-highway & off-highway logging trucks.
@@markkoster5418 Most of the American cabovers in New Zealand are built in Australia (Kenworth cabovers). That being said, we also build American cabovers here in New Zealand as well (International/Navistar cabovers).
My father was a grader operator in the 70s nothing got signed off until he was happy with his work. His dedication got him on the front page of our town local newspaper when he finally retired.
These Kiwi rigs, make 'under-loaded' Yankee '18-wheeler' semis, a bit of a joke. In the modern era, most Kiwi 'semis' (called 'artics' here in NZ), start with 3-axles and work their way to 5-axle or more (duel or super-single tyres). But 'truck & trailer' and 'B-train or Super-B', are by far the more regular combinations on NZ roads. The NZ 'Super-B', equates to the Aussie 'B-Double.' As for all those tyres, that's to do with better braking traction on NZ's windy and steep-gradient roads, which also reduces wear on NZ's bitumen road surfaces. Increased tyres, reduces tyre wear by spreading the load. The old 'A-train' of, 'prime-mover, semi-trailer and trailer', has practically disappeared from NZ roads. Commonly employed by NZ's fleet of milk-tankers, this combination has been replaced by the 'truck & trailer' configuration.
When do you open a café at that spot? I could sit there and enjoy a few coffees for hours! The enormous variety is impressive. From bog standard (in our view) DAF's, Scania's through cab-over US made stuff!. Oh and the Mainfreight are now also based over here in the Netherlands and have a so called LZV (longer/heavier vehicle) and looks a bit like the ones in New Zealand, only almost always DAF here. Thx for the upload.
Scania, Volvo and Kenworth, MAN, Mack,DAF our highways aren't for the faint hearted 💩! Great skills to drive on our narrow horse tracks. 🧐 Show NZ Off Highway trucks if it's safe too. Keep on Trucking!🚛🚚👍💪
Traffico ordinato , conducenti dei camion molto professionali , perfetta iscrizione in curva . Capita che nevichi su quelle strade ? Saluti dall ' Italia .
I'm not a truckie but do like trucks. My question may be stupid but why are the twin steer so popular over the ditch? Do they handle to winding roads better? I don't see many on the B-Doubles etc here in Sydney, mostly on the Heavy Rigids.
It does handle the winding roads better with twin steer in my experience. Especially with B doubles coming in hot..😅 at corners around 70 to 90kms.. so yea that weight does get distrubuted to twin steers rather then single axle. You would also feel a bit of better maneuvering at steering wheel if you have driven both types.
I’ve driven this road a few times but could you tell me which way trucks are travelling. Left to right of screen going north or south. I guess most are heading to or from Cook Strait Ferry.Thanks
Saya suka driver driver luar negri disiplin bawa mobilnya tetap nerada di jalurnya biarpun jalan arah lawanya kosong tidak seperti di indonesia amburadul
No more V8 ... 6you have a longer stroke. longer stroke more power, at lower Revs. Lower Revs less fuel, to get from a A to B... plus U.S. an N.Z. max loads dont require 750hp.
Hello from jamaica 🇯🇲 When it comes on to different varieties of different trucks no country on earth comes close to New Zealand beautiful country filled with beautiful people and trucks
Try Australia for big trucks , mining trucks hauling up to ten trails 😊
LINDAS CARRETAS TEM MINIATURAS DELAS SOU TEÓFILO OTONI MINAS GERAIS BRASIL 🇧🇷
😊
@@charlestaylor8566can they climb NZ hills and mountains
I still get a little intimated a liitle in awe of these big beast when travelling on the open road, especially our windy hilly roads.
70s was a thing for us kids to do the truckie wave when approaching an oncoming truckie and being rewarded when the truckies waved back was a buzz but if the truckie blew their horn it was the icing on the cake.
Great driving awesome video. Respect to the truckies out there
Such a sharp bend and the trailer doesn't fade into the next lane? That's some good driving.
Kudos to the men and women driving these behemoths. They keep the wheels of commerce, agriculture and public transport turning.
Mad trucks. I just came back from Coffs Harbour on the NSW North Coast. I sat on the second level of the hospital watching rigs of all sizes going past all day non-stop. Our eldest son lives there with his whanau. I used to live there in 1982. It's a 6 hour lag from Sydney where I live today on King Georges Rd Roselands. I watch trucks all day from my 3rd level balcony, as King Georges Rd is 3 lanes in both directions. Originally from Motiti Island in the BOP.
Scania for going up
Kenworth for going down
Fair road for testing truck and driver. Excellent video as I knew it would be. Thank you 👍🇮🇪
Cheers Eugene we always appreciate your comments. 👍🇳🇿
exactly !
For a min' there i though those bikers were gonna get off a walk, the Scania almost stalled
Thanks for posting this. I used to travel this hill for two years while working at the new bridge at Seddon. Met many a trucker.
The sound though 8:14
Amazing right?
@@TrucksAndTrailers1yeah
World Class Truck Spotting Right Here. Thank you for another awesome video NZ Trucks And Trailers
Glad you enjoyed it!
Regards from Finland!
Interesting to watch this from the practically opposite place on the planet. Your truck/trailer combinations are pretty similar to ours. Here the total weight of a 9-axle combination like the one at 1:40 is allowed to be 76 tons on public roads that don't have local weight limits. A "normal" full trailer combination can be up to 28m but a so called HCT (High Capacity Transport) combinations can be up to 34.5m long.
The biggest difference is that we have almost no American "big rigs" here. Volvo and Scania dominate with more than 70% of the market of big trucks. Most of the rest are Mercedes, Man, Daf, Iveco and our own Sisu.
It’s interesting to see such a variety of rigs and equipment all on the same road.
Here the 'normal' limit is 8.2T per twin-tyred axle, and a total of 50T for the vehicle at 1:40 (it's probably what we call a 50MAX as it has 9 axles). There are also 'HPMV' (high productivity motor vehicle) permits that are allowed more on certain route - I think 53T? HPMVs are confusing.
For 76T, I'm guessing axle limits are 6T for the singles, and 9T for the twins? Pretty interesting as pavement wear is the 4th power of weight, in other words 9T axles wear the pavement 45% more than 8.T axles do.
@@Erelyes Those weight limits are a paragraph jungle. I am not a commercial truck driver and I took my driving license in 1977. A lot of things have changed since then. I don't know all about the rules today. It's about the distance between the axles and if the axles have single or twin wheels. The maximum weight for a 2-axle truck is 18 tons. I guess it's 10 tons for an axle with twin tires and 8 tons for an axle with single tires. I tried to give you a link but obviously it isn't possible.
Here in N.Z the max weight limit for trucks on public roads without a permit is 44 tonnes. Trucks that display the yellow backed "H" decals have permits which allow them to exceed the max weight limit. With the right type of permit these trucks have a total max weight limit of 62 tonnes. Trucks with permits have to operate under specific routes issued by the RCA (Road Controlling Authority), which include roads and bridges that are certified to accommodate for the additional mass and/or length of these trucks (In simple terms, these trucks are required to only operate on our State Highway network).
Additionally, N.Z also has what is called "off-highway trucks" which operate on private backroads. These units are only used to cart large amounts of logs between logging sites. Many of these units have 2 full trailers attached together, some even have 3 full trailers. These off-highway trucks can weigh up to as much as 120 tonnes all up. By definition these units could technically be classed as Australian Road-Trains.
The 4 axel configuration is our most common setup for both rigid units & tractor units. For our trailers the number of axels range anywhere from 2-7 depending on trailer type (2-4 axels for semi trailers, 3-5 axels for full trailers, & 5-7 axels for B-Trains). The largest units we run on our highways are called "Super B-Trains" which are larger than a standard B-Train. These units have a total of 11 axels (including the tractor). Most of the units on our highways however have a total of 8-9 axels, and will typically haul around 50 tonnes. The extra tires help keep our poor quality roads in better condition for longer. Our max length limit is 23 meters, however special types of trucks, such as car transporters & Super B-Trains, are allowed to be 24.5 meters long.
The "American" trucks in N.Z & Australia are specially made for our conditions (they're essentially just beefed up versions of the U.S models). American truck brands such as Kenworth, Mack, Freightliner, Western Star, are either built or re-manufactured in Australia for this part of the world. N.Z recieves all these Australian spec'd American trucks in addition to one other American brand, International/Navistar trucks, which are built right here in N.Z exclusively for us. Kenworth also happens to be one of our most popular truck brands here in N.Z, they're especially popular among our logging industry, with both on-highway & off-highway logging trucks.
I love how they keep honking at you. Watching from South Africa
Loved the horn on the last truck. Awesome.greetings from the uk.
love it !! greeting from Tunisia !
Hey, thanks!
Lovely tidy V4 FH at 1:16. They are a super machine.
You can't beat the sound of a Detroit Diesel.
Right on!
Agree!
Scania V8 they are indeed "The king of the road ".
Absolutely! 💯
❤
lolly deals ..
K...FOR KENWORTH....KoR....
Plain characterless ugly euros ..
scania
might be in s/h europ
KENWORTH...
KING te RD ..
in this part of the world delusional euro.
Wow! At least I saw a mixture of American Cab-overs and most importantly MAN trucks! Wonderful
Glad you liked it!
I think the American cab-overs we get in NZ are made in Austrialia
@@markkoster5418 R.H.D
@@markkoster5418 Most of the American cabovers in New Zealand are built in Australia (Kenworth cabovers). That being said, we also build American cabovers here in New Zealand as well (International/Navistar cabovers).
@@dallasfrost1996 Thanks for that, I did not know that.
Cool seeing American, Japanese and European brands work together! Here in Belgium it's ONLY European brands 😮
Hallo from Indonesian Truck🇮🇩🙏 Kenwort K200 sexy truck👍👍👍👍...
Muy acertado el lugar para hacer el vídeo, mil gracias por hacernos disfrutar de las vistas y de esas maravillosas maquinas que son los camiones!!
Cool video makes me miss trucking back in NZ.
Glad you enjoyed it
Excelente vídeo 📹 campeão 🏆 👏👏👏👏👏👍😎🇧🇷
Very good seeing them keep in their lane coz it looks tight for me
Perfect tarmac,my congrats to the grader operator.
My father was a grader operator in the 70s nothing got signed off until he was happy with his work. His dedication got him on the front page of our town local newspaper when he finally retired.
They got some mean steep sharp bending roads in NZ ya gotta have your witts about ya thats forsure excellent vid !
Cheers Laurie!
In the north it's like every road
David Hunn
Excellent spot, excellent footage. The rear-steer trailers look like they make things a bit easier for the driver on those winding roads.
Yeah that was impressive.
Rear steer not on those trailers bro 😂😂😂
@@thomasrapana4063. Except on the float at 1:19 and the few quad axle semi-trailers. 🙂
IXOM have some of the coolest trucks on the road 👍🏼
These Kiwi rigs, make 'under-loaded' Yankee '18-wheeler' semis, a bit of a joke. In the modern era, most Kiwi 'semis' (called 'artics' here in NZ), start with 3-axles and work their way to 5-axle or more (duel or super-single tyres). But 'truck & trailer' and 'B-train or Super-B', are by far the more regular combinations on NZ roads. The NZ 'Super-B', equates to the Aussie 'B-Double.'
As for all those tyres, that's to do with better braking traction on NZ's windy and steep-gradient roads, which also reduces wear on NZ's bitumen road surfaces. Increased tyres, reduces tyre wear by spreading the load.
The old 'A-train' of, 'prime-mover, semi-trailer and trailer', has practically disappeared from NZ roads. Commonly employed by NZ's fleet of milk-tankers, this combination has been replaced by the 'truck & trailer' configuration.
Those cab-overs and trailer combinations look very similar to the ones I see in Australian videos👌
Is this a good thing?
i'd say so, always nice to see some k200s :)@@TrucksAndTrailers1
@Dat_ne_Guy we have a k200 special video if you haven’t seen that yet it’s got great selection. 👌🇳🇿
They're built in Australia
When do you open a café at that spot? I could sit there and enjoy a few coffees for hours! The enormous variety is impressive. From bog standard (in our view) DAF's, Scania's through cab-over US made stuff!.
Oh and the Mainfreight are now also based over here in the Netherlands and have a so called LZV (longer/heavier vehicle) and looks a bit like the ones in New Zealand, only almost always DAF here.
Thx for the upload.
สวัสดีครับ❤🎉 คำทักทายจากเมืองไทยครับ🎉
Truck panjang sekali...
Trucknya kren bosku...
Cheers Sarjana!
Beautiful Trucks.Hello from Germany
Thanks, hello from NZ
Hallo Deutchland
Sangat suka lihat truknya dan sopir patuh marka jalan
Me turtle Daf aint V8 but cheers for putting it on here haha always makes my day seeing you fellas
Lol no worries mate, what one are you. If we know you then you get the salute.
@@TrucksAndTrailers1 Hilton's CF Daf
Thought as much, your enthusiasm with the horn sold the deal lol
Nothing wrong with an inline 6
Neither does the vast majority of trucks in this video....
Excellent 👌👌👌👍👍👍
Dude that's a frecken awesome video can you try to get a rage horn from the booths kw
Well we will see because we also want them looking ahead on the roads.
19:44 that is one clean volvo. Newest one too
We thought we noticed that too, it’s very nice that’s for sure.
so beautiful truck
SUPER MÁQUINAS DE NOVA ZELÂNDIA 🎉🎉🎉 ,UM ABRAÇO AQUI DE LISBOA PORTUGAL 🇵🇹
Cheers Alex! 👌
Scania, Volvo and Kenworth, MAN, Mack,DAF our highways aren't for the faint hearted 💩! Great skills to drive on our narrow horse tracks. 🧐 Show NZ Off Highway trucks if it's safe too. Keep on Trucking!🚛🚚👍💪
Beautyful Trucks
Thank You Very much ♥️ NZ Trucks And Trailers
No worries Francis I hope you are well.
Thank You Very much ♥️ NZ Trucks And Trailers
Scania V8 The king Off The-road N The Best
nice footage
Thank you! 👍🇳🇿
Cool vids
Cheers much appreciated!
Traffico ordinato , conducenti dei camion molto professionali , perfetta iscrizione in curva . Capita che nevichi su quelle strade ?
Saluti dall ' Italia .
No it doesn’t I don’t think so, but nice to meet you especially from all the way from Italy!
@@TrucksAndTrailers1 Perhaps we will meet in the Appennines , on the road of the 1000 Miles . Bye .
I'm not a truckie but do like trucks. My question may be stupid but why are the twin steer so popular over the ditch? Do they handle to winding roads better? I don't see many on the B-Doubles etc here in Sydney, mostly on the Heavy Rigids.
I guess they prefer them
It does handle the winding roads better with twin steer in my experience. Especially with B doubles coming in hot..😅 at corners around 70 to 90kms.. so yea that weight does get distrubuted to twin steers rather then single axle. You would also feel a bit of better maneuvering at steering wheel if you have driven both types.
I’ve driven this road a few times but could you tell me which way trucks are travelling. Left to right of screen going north or south. I guess most are heading to or from Cook Strait Ferry.Thanks
Nice 👍👍
6:29 you couldn’t crop this for this truck only and send across to me?
The green Scania? Where do I send it? Happy to make some pics for you mate.
What are the advantages of a dual steer axle heavy rigid plus trailer over a B double? This combination seems quite common in NZ.
Better cornering I think
@@TrucksAndTrailers1 would make sense given the amount of hilly and winding terrain they have in NZ.
Nice 👍
Thank you! Cheers!
Consulta .cuantos kilos puede llevar un camión con acoplado de 5 ejes ¿?
the blue rav in the video at 1:04 I swear bombs life hahaha
Black kenworth @7.17 🥷
Fuk i love trucks man❤
thank you bud
👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻
Truckers don't put name plates? I see European truckers do.
Were do you record
choice when they blast the air horns choice
What do you mean?
❤👌👍🏆
… wondering if this is what all the motorways in NZ look?
Nope 👎
@@TrucksAndTrailers1 unfortunate… a country with such beautiful country sights.
Where is this located?
How many drivers were punjabs🤔 flooding the driving scene teko drivers
Currymunchers.
❤❤❤❤❤❤
Are there any dirty trucks in New Zealand?
Not really.. only some log trucks or construction one
8:23 quite a few thousand litres of hypochlorite bleach there
السايق من اليمين ياخذ الى اليسار
Another lovely day out on kiwi 🥝 road's, 😅😅😅😊.
Saya suka driver driver luar negri disiplin bawa mobilnya tetap nerada di jalurnya biarpun jalan arah lawanya kosong tidak seperti di indonesia amburadul
where is it or what country?
State Highway One, just south of Blenheim at the top of the South Island of New Zealand
America, pay attention on down hill.
7:13 🔥🔥🔥
Hello everyone I'm class 5 driver looking for a job.
I don’t drive down flat roads I pull road trains with 3 trailers over hills with 10 percent grades in North Queensland you fool😢😢😢😢😢
🙋. 🚛💨💨💨💨🇨🇱
Beda sekali dgn indonesia, di indonesia! Truck2 yg baguspun tidak bisa merawat, semuanya seperti barang rongsokan! Kasian!!
Cant even see the driver
All that noise can't wait for electric trucks to come to New Zealand in year 3000 😂
Same na
Nice trucks but LAME title..... only the few Scania's in this video have a V8 !
American trucks have straight 6 engines only
No more V8 ...
6you have a longer stroke. longer stroke more power, at lower Revs.
Lower Revs less fuel, to get from a A to B...
plus U.S. an N.Z. max loads dont require 750hp.
Tôi thích những chiếc hino có vẻ nó xuất hiện rất ít
Interesting 🧐