Meijer Logistics driver Ron Diamond points to the button that can save him considerable work and time — and prevent an injury — during a hookup.

Meijer Logistics driver Ron Diamond points to the button that can save him considerable work and time — and prevent an injury — during a hookup.

Ron Diamond is typical of the drivers who run out of Meijer Logistics’ distribution facility in Newport, Mich., south of Detroit. He drops and hooks trailers about 10 times a day, and it can be tiring. But dropping and hooking are integral to the operation of Grand Rapids-based Meijer Stores, which has 228 tractors and 2,850 trailers in its private fleet. 

“Cranking the landing gear is the hard part,” Diamond says. Cranking is required not only to raise and lower the gear for travel and parking, but also to adjust the nose height of trailers before coupling onto them with the tractor’s fifth wheel.

Even if the landing gear is in low range, it takes arm, shoulder and back muscles to raise a nose so the upper coupler plate and kingpin matches the height of the fifth wheel. Of course, it’s harder if the trailer’s loaded. Dan Scherer, Meijer Logistics’ fleet maintenance manager, says back injuries can be a plague to drivers and employers alike.

But those injuries may be a thing of the past because Meijer has adopted the Hadley SmartValve, which turns the tractor and its air suspension into a jack that does the heavy work.

The Hadley SmartValve is primarily an adjustment valve that keeps the tandem suspension at a preset height. If a trailer’s nose is too low, using the normal dump valve bleeds air from the bags and lets the tractor’s rear end settle down so the frame and fifth wheel slides under the nose. If it still can’t get under, the driver backs up a bit more so two ramps atop the frame rails — specially spec’d by Meijer — wedge against the nose and upper coupler. 

Then, instead of having to get out to start 

cranking, the driver pushes a button on the dash. This sends air back into the bags and re-raises the tractor’s rear along with the trailer, unloading the weight off of the landing legs. Now he can resume backing under the nose and couple onto the kingpin. The SmartValve also helps if the trailer’s nose is too high because the tractor’s rear can be raised over normal ride height to match it. 

A Hadley SmartValve is now on 200 of Meijer’s tractors. It’s part of the normal spec on all new equipment, and it’s almost completely phased into its fleet. “This device not only reduces injuries, but it’s a real time-saver for the drivers,” Scherer says. “It also reduces trailer landing leg and gearbox damage.”

Cranking to adjust a trailer nose’s height is the hard part of hooking, and can cause back, shoulder and arm injuries.

Cranking to adjust a trailer nose’s height is the hard part of hooking, and can cause back, shoulder and arm injuries.

Fleet Snapshot

Who: Meijer Logistics

Where: Newport, Mich.

Fleet: 228 tractors and 2,850 trailers (system-wide)

Operations: Regional distribution supporting Meijer Stores

Fun Fact: Meijer’s 220 “supercenters” in six states sell groceries and merchandise, from electronics and auto supplies to housewares and clothing.

Challenge: Injuries and time associated with drop-and-hook operations

About the author
Tom Berg

Tom Berg

Former Senior Contributing Editor

Journalist since 1965, truck writer and editor since 1978.

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