Any motel that says "Truck Parking" offers tractor-trailer parking. Whether a property allows you to park your truck there is totally up to the management of that property--some Ramadas, say, allow it while others don't.
Yes.
Normally there will be 5 or 6 axles. 1 steering axle 2drive axles and either 2 or 3 trailer axles.(Some states do allow more trailer axles.)
13 feet, six inches. Some states west of the Mississippi river allow a height of 14 feet.
As amazing as it sounds, Parking Games is a site devoted to video games featuring parking different types of vehicles. There are games that allow the user to park a tow truck, tractor, classic car, or a semi truck. There are also different parking locations such as a mall parking lot, army base, or concert venue.
No. While some states may expressly allow a vehicle to be operated on private property without a CDL (although it does put them in conflict with the FMCSR), you absolutely cannot legally operate a tractor trailer or commercial straight truck on public property and roadways without possessing the appropriate class of licence for that vehicle. Now, if that tractor trailer is a registered farm vehicle, rather than a commercial vehicle, the story will be a bit different, and different states have different regulations on that.
The statutory height for a van trailer is 13 feet, six inches. Some states west of the Mississippi allow trailers up to 14 feet tall.
In North America, the standard height of a dry or refrigerated box van is 13'6. States west of the Mississippi River allow a height of 14'0, but this isn't the norm in those areas.
supplies air to the trailer brakes to allow the operator to release the brakes
Yes. It is considered trespassing, as the parking lots are provided to allow parking for those who meet the criteria for parking there, NOT as a throughway.
Yes, but you'd better not be so much as half an inch over the 13'6 height. If you can't clear the bars which hang down over the toll lanes, they won't let you through. If you have an air ride trailer, you can empty the air bags in your trailer and do the same with your tractor air bags, and that should get you through. Otherwise, you'll have to turn around and go the long way.
Class A, both in the case of commercial and non-commercial licences permits the operator to drive combinations over 26,000 lbs. GVWR, in which the vehicle in tow is rated at greater than 10,000 lbs. A Class A CDL doesn't necessarily allow you to drive a tractor-trailer - if you don't road test on one, but rather, some other combination which falls within Class A CDL requirements (for example, Ford F650 and a trailer rated at over 10,000 lbs), you'll get an "8" restriction - No tractor-trailers.
it is possible but some states don't allow it.