You are driving too close behind them.
Trucks have very large blind spots. If you cannot look in the mirror and see the driver's face, he cannot see you.
It means that the truck is available to rent. Probably with driver and probably 'by the load'.
The blind spot in a vehicle is an area around the vehicle that cannot be directly observed by the driver, while at the controls under existing circumstances. It exists in cars, trucks, motorboats and aircraft to name some examples.
Vehicle operating space is the area around the vehicle that cannot be seen from the driver's seat.
You can add your roommate to your auto policy as a driver but you cannot add their vehicle to your policy. You cannot insure a vehicle you do not own and since you have no legal relationship with a roommate you cannot add a vehicle they own to your policy. You do have an obligation to add them as a driver on your policy if they ever drive your car.
The mirrors on a truck are used by the driver to see vehicles behind them. If a driver cannot see a vehicle in their mirror, it means that the vehicle is in the truck's blind spot, where the driver cannot easily observe it. As a result, there is a risk of the truck driver changing lanes or making a turn without realizing the presence of a vehicle in their blind spot, which can lead to accidents. The sign serves as a warning to other drivers to stay visible in the truck's mirrors to reduce this risk.
In modern trucks, nothing. You can get up from the driver's seat, and walk right back into the sleeper berth. Of course, you would do this when the vehicle is not in motion.
avoid following a truck too closely and position your vehicle so the truck driver can see it in his side mirrors
Like pretty much any other brand of truck, it should be on the bottom of the dash on the driver's side of the vehicle.
Because the driver is still in control of the vehicle and may simply decide to "floor it" and flee, AND it cannot be determined what is on, around, or within the drivers grasp that may be used as a weapon. The entire driver's body, and their actions, cannot be seen from the outside the vehicle. - - - - - - - - Police offers mainly do this for safety of the vehicles driveing by and to him or her's self.
Yes. If the passenger is hurt in an accident caused by the driver, the passenger is fully entitled to sue the driver. In fact even if the passenger is a spouse of the driver, the passenger can sue.
If the person you have in the vehicle is 18 years of age and older, has a valid driver's license, it probably is ok.