https://t.co/u4n3X4lmNwSCS Software said:New screenshots for American Truck Simulator on our Steam page. Which one is your favorite? http://store.steampowered.com/app/270880/
https://twitter.com/SCSsoftware/status/689133491523588098
https://t.co/u4n3X4lmNwSCS Software said:New screenshots for American Truck Simulator on our Steam page. Which one is your favorite? http://store.steampowered.com/app/270880/
Beautiful ! Why do we have to wait ??! :p
Looks like a daycab 389Is that a 389 I see in the mirror!!!?
Is that a 389 I see in the mirror!!!?
I do have a bit of suspicion that the KW W900, Volvo and that Pete will be AI only, until they properly finish them..
Neither's driving a Tractor trailer through central Paris but we still do that! :pAlso, are massive tractor-trailers allowed to drive through downtown SF? Wouldn't be very practical, would it?:confused:
With every update I get the let down that I won't be able to afford it until Summer. God dammit. :PGetting slowly more hyped for this game
Also, are massive tractor-trailers allowed to drive through downtown SF? Wouldn't be very practical, would it?:confused:
Neither's driving a Tractor trailer through central Paris but we still do that! :p
18 wheelers deliver EVERYWHERE except really small towns where they can just load it onto a rigid, box van or standard van.
Good info, cheers!Yes and no, the Golden Gate bridge has a length limit to 48 foot trailers and the total length of the truck cannot exceed 55, maybe 60 feet. (Most OTR semis are 65 feet or longer)
Downtown San Francisco does prohibit semis unless otherwise allowed by city officials I.E moving trucks, construction trucks etc... There are warehouses in Oakland and the surrounding bay area where semis offload onto smaller straight trucks for downtown deliveries.
The reason is because downtown SF is full of hills, semis can and have gotten hung up on the hills.
Another similar city with a similar law, though more lax, is NYC, all out of state semis are required to drop at port authority warehouses around NYC for local trucks. Occasionally semis are allowed in, but permits and tolls can cost an arm and a leg. So most companies elect to offload at the warehouses.
Not where I live/work... You'll get exicuted by the state if you even think about delivering goods to shops in a city center with a huge truck. Not that it'd be very practical anyway.18 wheelers deliver EVERYWHERE except really small towns where they can just load it onto a rigid, box van or standard van.
In the UK I've seen some "Loading Times" signs as well. In cities they even mark up curbs with two yellow stripes. Not double-yellow parking lines, actual two stripes going UP the curb.Not where I live/work... You'll get exicuted by the state if you even think about delivering goods to shops in a city center with a huge truck. Not that it'd be very practical anyway.
Most goods indeed get transshipped to smaller trucks or vans (or bicycle-couriers...)and get delivered that way. And even then you're only allowed to go there with said truck/van on certain times of the day.Demons sent by Satan himself to mess everything up.