With just days to go before the scheduled implementation of the new and more restrictive hours of service rules, fleets and drivers need to be asking if their electronic onboard recording devices are ready for the change.

Credit:  Continental Commercial Vehicles.

Credit: Continental Commercial Vehicles.

"For the most part, updating to the new rules is a slam dunk," says Joel Beal, president of LoadTrek Technologies. "The big guys are already there. Some of the smaller providers, especially those using older in-cab devices could face a few challenges."

Beal says some older devices may not have enough onboard memory to accept the coding changes required by the new rules.

The way most of the code is written today, the parameters like driving time are not hard coded, instead they are variables.

"X hours of driving. You fill in the X. Could be 10, could be 11," Beal says. "You just have to type in a value and you're done. It's the same with the 14 hours off or 70-hour weekly limit. It's just a number to a programmer."

The 30-minute break could pose problems for some applications, Beal warns. "It's something we don't have now, so it's not a variable we can change in a hard-coded system. We have to create it," he says. "If you're using any recently designed (within the past five years) automatic on-board recording device that won't be a problem. Problems could arise with older units that have been around for 10 years or more. There may not enough memory to support the changes."

Fleets and independents using EOBRS or ELDs or AOBRDs, or whatever the current moniker is, should check with their providers to make sure their device can accept the update.

Rolling out the update is the easy part.

While the exact process may vary across the different brands and system networks, Alexis Capelle, the EOBR program manager for Continental Commercial Vehicles, says it will be a very easy and transparent process transparent process with VDO RoadLog.

"When we push the update out across our network, the customer will see a message advising that an automatic update is ready to install," he says. "All the customer has to do is accept it. The update will not become active until it has been accepted."

Continental says updates are available to its VDO RoadLog customers to meet the new HOS requirements.

Beal says in many telematics systems, the updates to the in-cab devices will be equally transparent. They will be sent downstream from the main office system in the usual manner and will sit on the in-cab device until they are accepted and activated.

The activation date still remains somewhat in question. FMCSA has said in no uncertain terms it wants the change to take place as planned on July 1. A slim chance that a court could derail that plan with a decision on the rule before or even after its implementation date.

According to Capelle, even if the update is activated before July 1, and the recorder begins running on the new rules, the driver will not be in violation of the rule if they continue operating under the old rule.

"The device will be running the new hours of service rules, but compliance with the rule is not required until July 1, or when it officially comes into effect," he says.

In the case of EOBRs without telematic capability, updates will have to be physically installed on the in-cab devices before the July 1 deadline.

"Some of the programming changes will have to be handled with physical media, a card or a key," Beal says. "Some newer systems do that too, but it's not a shortage of resources, it's just the way the system is designed. Drivers "turn in their logs" on a USB stick or something like it, and the updates are delivered to the truck via the same key when the driver plugs it in again."

Due to the varying capabilities of the different systems current available, some may include alerts that drivers are approaching compliance thresholds. These aren't required by law, but they are sure nice to have. Even older systems without the advanced features can still be compliant.

About the author
Jim Park

Jim Park

Equipment Editor

A truck driver and owner-operator for 20 years before becoming a trucking journalist, Jim Park maintains his commercial driver’s license and brings a real-world perspective to Test Drives, as well as to features about equipment spec’ing and trends, maintenance and drivers. His On the Spot videos bring a new dimension to his trucking reporting. And he's the primary host of the HDT Talks Trucking videocast/podcast.

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