Vehicle Repair and Maintenance Checklist

Scheduled preventive maintenance (PM) inspection for a Class 7/8 tractor and trailer, run by the shop technician against FMCSR Part 396 and CVSA out-of-service criteria. Use this for A-service intervals or as a pre-annual-DOT-inspection walkthrough.

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1

Intake and Work Order

  1. Open the work order in Fleetio
    • Create the PM work order in Fleetio (or RTA / Whip Around) against the unit number. Pull the maintenance history and any open driver DVIR defects from the prior trip — those defects must be addressed before this unit returns to service per Part 396.11.

  2. Capture unit identifiers and odometer
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  3. Review outstanding DVIR defects
    • Pull the last 7 days of DVIRs from the ELD platform (Motive, Samsara, KeepTruckin). Any defect marked as affecting safe operation must be repaired and signed off by a mechanic before release — Part 396.11(c).

2

Engine and Drivetrain

  1. Check engine oil level and condition
    • Dipstick reading on a level surface, engine off for 10 minutes. Note color and viscosity — milky indicates coolant intrusion; gritty indicates injector cup failure on a DD15 or ISX. Flag for sample if either is present.

  2. Inspect transmission and rear-end for leaks
    • Look at the transmission pan, output seal, and inter-axle drive shaft on tandems. A pinion seal weep on a Meritor or Dana rear is common and should be quoted now rather than at the next service.

  3. Check coolant, DEF, and aftertreatment
    • Top off coolant at the surge tank and DEF at the blue cap. Pull diagnostic codes for DPF soot load, EGR delta-pressure, and SCR efficiency — clogged DPFs and crystallized DEF dosers are the most common roadside breakdowns on post-2010 engines.

  4. Inspect belts, hoses, and air filter
    • Check serpentine belt for glazing and cracks every 3 inches; replace if either is present. Pull the air filter and check the restriction gauge — replace at 25 inH2O. Inspect charge-air-cooler hoses at the clamps for oil residue indicating a turbo boost leak.

3

Brakes, Tires, and Wheels

  1. Measure brake lining and drum wear
    • Lining thickness below 1/4" on the shoe or 1/8" on a steer axle puts the unit OOS per CVSA. Measure drum diameter against the maximum stamped on the drum — discard at the limit, not when it looks worn.

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  2. Check brake chamber stroke and slack adjusters
    • Chock the wheels, pump air to 100 psi, release, and apply with engine off. Mark the pushrod and measure stroke at 90-100 psi. A Type-30 long-stroke is OOS at 2". Two or more brakes 20%+ out of adjustment = OOS. Automatic slacks must not be manually adjusted to mask a failed component.

  3. Run air system leak-down test
    • Build to governor cut-out, shut down, and apply foot brake. Leak rate must not exceed 3 psi/min single, 4 psi/min combination with brakes applied. Verify low-air warning at ~60 psi and spring brake pop-out at 20-45 psi.

  4. Measure tire tread depth and pressure
    • Steers must be at or above 4/32"; drives and trailer above 2/32". Check pressure cold against the door sticker (typically 105-110 psi steers, 100 psi drives). Note any sidewall cuts, bulges, or exposed cord — all are immediate OOS.

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  5. Inspect wheel ends and hub seals
    • Check hub oil level at the sight glass; cloudy oil indicates water intrusion. Look for grease at the back of the wheel (failed inner seal) and rust trails at lug nuts (loose wheel). Re-torque to manufacturer spec on any wheel that has been off in the last 100 miles.

4

Steering, Suspension, and Coupling

  1. Check steering lash and tie-rod ends
    • Free play in a 20" steering wheel above 2" is OOS. Have a helper rock the wheel while you watch the drag link, tie rod ends, and pitman arm for any movement at the joints — any visible movement at the stud is a replacement.

  2. Inspect springs, U-bolts, and air bags
    • One cracked or broken leaf is repairable; a broken main leaf or 25% of the leaves broken is OOS. On air-ride, look for chafing on the bag and leaks at the height-control valve linkage.

  3. Inspect fifth wheel, kingpin, and locking jaws
    • Gauge the jaw-to-kingpin gap with a Holland or Fontaine gauge — over 1/2" horizontal is OOS. Check secondary lock engagement and mounting bolt torque. Grease the top plate; dry plates cause hard couplings that bend kingpins.

  4. Lubricate chassis grease points
    • Hit all zerks per the OEM schedule — spring pins, slack adjusters, S-cam bushings, drive line U-joints and slip yoke, fifth wheel. Use chassis grease, not wheel-bearing grease.

5

Lights, Electrical, and In-Cab

  1. Test all required lamps and reflectors
    • Headlights (high and low), turn signals, four-way flashers, brake lights, marker lamps, ICC bumper lights, and license plate lamp — all required per Part 393.11. One inoperable lamp on a combination vehicle drops a CSA point on a roadside; multiple inops are OOS at night.

  2. Inspect battery, cables, and alternator output
    • Load-test each battery; replace any reading below 75% CCA. Clean terminals and check ground straps to frame. Alternator should hold 13.8-14.2V at fast idle with lights on.

  3. Verify ELD, dashboard, and gauges
    • Confirm the ELD (Motive, Samsara, Geotab) powers up, syncs to ECM, and shows the correct driver if assigned. Check all dash warning lamps illuminate at key-on and extinguish at run. A malfunctioning ELD must be repaired within 8 days per Part 395.34.

  4. Test horn, wipers, defrost, and HVAC
    • Inoperative defroster or wipers is OOS in inclement weather. Replace blades that streak. Verify mirror heat on units with heated mirrors.

6

Trailer and Reefer

  1. Identify trailer type
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  2. Inspect trailer brakes, axles, and ABS
    • Same brake-stroke and lining standards as tractor. Verify ABS lamp on trailer extinguishes after a couple of seconds — Part 393.55 requires functional ABS on trailers built after March 1998.

  3. Check landing gear, doors, and floor
    • Crank landing gear through both speeds; replace gearbox if it grinds or skips. Check door seals for daylight and floor for soft spots that will fail at a pallet jack.

  4. Run reefer pre-cool and PM cycle
    • On Carrier or Thermo King units, run a pre-trip self-test and a pull-down from ambient to 0°F. Check belts, defrost cycle, return-air sensor, and fuel level. Download the temperature recorder data and confirm the last download is within the customer's required interval.

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  5. Inspect load-securement hardware
    • Count and inspect chains, binders, straps, edge protectors, and tarps against the Part 393 Subpart I working-load-limit requirements. Pull any chain with bent links or strap with cuts deeper than 25% of the width.

7

Safety Equipment and Documentation

  1. Verify required emergency equipment
    • Part 393.95 requires: one 5-BC fire extinguisher (or two 4-BC for hazmat), three bidirectional reflective triangles, and spare fuses for any non-circuit-breaker-protected circuit. Confirm extinguisher gauge is in the green and the inspection tag is current.

  2. Confirm annual inspection decal and registration
    • Part 396.17 annual inspection decal must be within 12 months on every CMV unit and trailer. Also verify IRP cab card, current registration, IFTA decals on both sides of the cab, and HVUT 2290 Schedule 1 on file for plate renewal.

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  3. Confirm overall PM result
    • The shop manager reviews the technician's findings and decides disposition. Any CVSA OOS condition must be corrected before this unit is dispatched.

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  4. Tag the unit OOS and open a follow-up work order
    • Hang the OOS tag in the cab, lock the keys in the shop board, and notify dispatch so the unit is not assigned a load. Create the follow-up work order with the failed item, parts ETA, and target return-to-service date.

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Steps 29
Category Transportation
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