In addition to the existing vehicle management functionality, including service scheduling, fault reporting, repairs, inspections, tyre & brake replacement tracking, and the automated reminders for upcoming or overdue tasks related to these, TigerFleet has just added Defect Notice management to its platform.
Australia has around 600,000 heavy vehicles registered nationwide, with around 200,000 of these in New South Wales.
During the June 2019 quarter 88,421 vehicles units were inspected for fatigue management compliance, valid registration and driver licences, outstanding defects, permit compliance, mass management and load restraints, and mechanical, steering and suspension condition. Of these 10,136 vehicles were issued a total of 12,749 defect notices. Around 72% of these were minor defects, 17.5% were formal warning defects, 10% were major defects and .5% resulted in vehicles being grounded (see Table 1).
Vehicles were also inspected as part of the Heavy Vehicle Inspection Scheme (HVIS), which inspects for roadworthiness and vehicle standards for registration renewal. Of the 24,237 vehicles inspected 11,419 defect notices were issued, with a compliance rate of just 55.1% (See Table 2).