Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

'E-Z Guider' begs the question, Why don't trailers have backup lights?

Ever back a trailer into a dark alley or loading dock? Talk about a black hole!

by Tom Berg
August 25, 2011
'E-Z Guider' begs the question, Why don't trailers have backup lights?

 

2 min to read


Ever back a trailer into a dark alley or loading dock? Talk about a black hole!

The inventors of the "E-Z Guider," Clint Younger and Ida Manning of Newark, N.J., must've done it, because they've come up with an invention that would light the way.

"Professional drivers who generally move the bulk of our nation's freight are superb drivers but can always use help when backing trailers down dark alleys, tunnels, garages and similar tight passages," they say in a press release from Invention Resource International.

"The E-Z Guider illuminates these passages sufficiently to be seen easily in the rear-view mirrors and thus helps avoid errant steering of the trailer and inadvertent sideswiping collisions with walls, fences and/or other structures or objects. When not in use, the E-Z Guider lights are covered and protected."

The product would include eight lights, four on each side, that pivot up and down, and each light would be swivel mounted within the base. A driver would operate E-Z Guider lights from the cab.

Preventing collisions would of course save money. This might offset the cost of installing these lights, though it might take several non-accidents (how do you count those?) to pay for motorized devices. I'd install stationary lights.

The release says insurance companies might be induced to lower their collision preiums, though it's likely that damage from such mishaps would usually fall within the deductible amount of a policy.

For the inventors' sake, I hope E-Z Guider makes it to market, because I can see owner-operators buying the product. Big over-the-road fleets wouldn't, because executives would expect the lights themselves to be damaged and/or stolen. Theft is a real concern when you have thousands of trailers on the road and sitting in, yes -- dark yards.

To me, E-Z Guider begs the question: Why don't trailers come standard with back-up lights, at least at the rear? Back-up lights are standard on tractors, but about all they do is illuminate a trailer's underside.

Cost is an obvious argument against the idea. Many fleet buyers view trailers as a commodity and want to keep the purchase price as low as possible. But some foodservice operations which require drivers to maneuver in congested and populated areas, like restaurant parking lots, do buy backup lights. So trailer makers can do it.

Anyway, for more information about this product, go to one of these websites: www.inventionpublicity.com, www.sellidea.com or www.virtual-prototype.com.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Blog Posts

Trailer Talkby Deborah LockridgeJuly 9, 2021

Pulsing Back-of-Trailer Lamps Aim to Prevent Crashes

Can the addition of a pulsing brake lamp on the back of a trailer prevent rear-end collisions? FMCSA seems to think so, if its exemptions are any indication.

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Deborah LockridgeMay 13, 2021

Designing a 14-Foot Trailer

Trailers are 13 feet, 6 inches high, right? Not for Hub Group, which developed a special 14-foot-high trailer spec for a dedicated customer based in California. Learn more in the Trailer Talk blog.

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Jack RobertsApril 29, 2021

CARB Comes for Reefer Trailers

A new round of emissions control regulations decreed by the California Air Resource Board will begin affecting refrigerated trailer and TRU design and operations next year.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Trailer Talkby Terri Lucas, SkyBitzApril 12, 2021

5 Ways Data Analysis Maximizes the Value of Trailer Telematics

Are you getting the most out of your trailer telematics investment?

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Stephane BabcockOctober 23, 2020

Can You Guess What's in That Trailer?

You don’t always know what’s in the trailers that pass you on the road. But some of those trailers are carrying something a little more dangerous that frozen food or new bedding…like, maybe, a nuclear weapon. But this isn’t an ordinary trailer; this is a trailer specifically made to not only carry this type of payload, but protect it at all costs.

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Deborah LockridgeOctober 8, 2020

How Trailers Are Harnessing 'Free' Energy

Can trailers play a more active role in sustainable transport beyond aerodynamic add-ons or low-rolling-resistance tires? Some companies think so.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Trailer Talkby Deborah LockridgeAugust 3, 2020

Wrapping a Trailer for COVID’s Everyday Heroes

“We don’t only deliver freight. We deliver awareness.” That’s what Jim Barrett, president and CEO of Road Scholar Transport, likes to say about the Dunmore, Pennsylvania-based carrier’s “awareness fleet.” Its latest trailer wrap honors the everyday heroes of the pandemic.

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Jim ParkJune 1, 2020

How a Tanker Fleet is Using Unorthodox Trailer Lighting to Fight Rear-End Collisions

Groendyke Transport watched the number of rear-end collisions with its trailers rise steadily until it tried an unorthodox and then unapproved method of alerting following drivers that its trucks were applying brakes and slowing down.

Read More →
Trailer Talkby Stephane BabcockMay 14, 2020

The Role Trailers are Playing in COVID-19 Funerals

In places such as New York City and Detroit, overwhelmed hospitals and mortuaries are using refrigerated trailers to store the bodies of people killed by COVID-19.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Trailer Talkby Jack RobertsMarch 6, 2020

Reefer Trailer Aims to Help Reach Zero Emissions

Wabash National is partnering with C&S Wholesale Grocers to test a new type of zero-emissions refrigerated trailer.

Read More →