May 21, 2026
Have you ever witnessed a massive truck, designed to carry 40 tons, roaring down the highway at breakneck speeds? Or intercity buses, meant to cruise steadily at 100 km/h, weaving through traffic like arrows shot from a bow? These are not occasional driving mistakes but gaping holes in the fabric of road safety. When legal limits are repeatedly breached and vehicles are pushed beyond their physical limits, the safety we take for granted hangs in the balance.
Regulations impose strict weight limits on heavy vehicles to ensure they operate safely within their design capacities. For instance, a five-axle TIR (tractor, trailer, and semi-trailer combination) is legally restricted to a maximum total weight of 40 tons. Yet, in reality, some TIRs ply the roads at a staggering 80 tons—double their intended capacity. This gross overloading places immense strain on tires, braking systems, and suspensions, severely compromising handling and stopping power. In emergencies, overloaded vehicles require significantly longer braking distances, respond sluggishly to steering inputs, and are prone to losing control, effectively becoming mobile bombs on the road.
Intercity buses are not exempt from this peril. A compliant three-axle bus has a legal maximum weight of 24 tons. Alarmingly, many operators, chasing higher profits, overload these buses to 36 tons or more. Such practices not only disregard passenger safety but also inflict additional wear and tear on road infrastructure.
Speed is another critically overlooked hazard. TIRs with a legal speed limit of 90 km/h and intercity buses capped at 100 km/h frequently hurtle down highways at 120–130 km/h. The dangers of such speeding extend far beyond merely "driving too fast."
The physics of kinetic energy (Ek) is revealing: Ek = ½ × mv². This means that as a vehicle’s mass (m) and speed (v) increase, its kinetic energy grows exponentially. Even minor speed increments translate into dramatically higher energy levels.
These figures underscore how seemingly modest speed hikes in heavy vehicles unleash catastrophic forces. When accidents occur, the devastation is often irreversible.
Current oversight of heavy vehicles relies primarily on two measures: weigh-in-motion scales to monitor loads and radar to track speeds. Yet these alone are insufficient to ensure safety.
Modern trucks and TIRs are factory-equipped with electronic speed limiters to enforce legal maximum speeds. However, these devices are frequently ignored or illegally disabled. Many limiters remain inactive or are circumvented, allowing vehicles to breach design thresholds effortlessly.
Critical safety systems like onboard diagnostics (OBD), which should detect limiter status, are inadequately checked during annual inspections. Some vehicles pass inspections despite having nonfunctional limiters.
Moreover, "backstreet" garages offer illegal modifications that strip vehicles of safety features, including:
Such modifications not only void safety designs but also magnify the destructive potential of accidents. Regulatory crackdowns on these rogue operators remain lax, perpetuating hazards.
The risks posed by overloaded and speeding heavy vehicles are intolerable. Beyond endangering lives, they degrade infrastructure and erode public trust. Only through coordinated efforts—spanning regulation, technology, enforcement, and education—can we fortify our roads against these preventable threats. Safety is not a privilege; it is a right that demands unwavering vigilance.