VINs / 2001 / International / 4700 / 1HTSCABM31H388479

2001 International 4700

Vin: 1HTSCABM31H388479
Type: Truck
Year: 2001
Make: International
Model: 4700
GVWR: ?
International

Engine

Manufacturer
International
Fuel
Diesel
Displacement(Liters)
7.275856416
Cylinders
8

Drive Trian

Type
4x2

Manufacturer

Manufacturer
INTERNATIONAL MOTORS, LLC
Plant City
SPRINGFIELD
Plant State
OHIO
Plant Country
UNITED STATES (USA)

Safety Features

Brake System Type
Hydraulic

Do you manage a fleet?

FleetChaser will help you track:

  • Mileage and maintenance
  • Filling and expenses
  • Real-time technical condition

Learn More

You'll never want to go back to how your fleet operated before Fleet Chaser

Our construction fleet management software makes your fleet management better, safer, and easier.

Free Trial

Construction and Fleet Management Articles

Dash cams: safety, driver privacy, compliance. How to do it all Dash cams: safety, driver privacy, compliance. How to do it all
But your drivers may need to be on board with that decision. How do you do what’s best for your drivers and fleet without harming driver trust while juggling legal concerns? Not to worry. Here are crucial points to keep in mind in your efforts to equip your fleet with dash cams while preserving driver privacy:
How to Avoid the 5 Most Common Truck Breakdowns How to Avoid the 5 Most Common Truck Breakdowns
Keeping your trucks on the road means keeping your business running. A single defect can pose a major setback to your fleet, sacrificing time, money, and customer satisfaction. “Prevention is better than cure” applies here pretty much. That’s why extending the lifetime of your trucks boils down to preventive maintenance: knowing what type of issues are likely to arise and addressing them early on. Take a proactive approach to your truck’s upkeep and find out how to avoid the five most common breakdown causes.
Two Fleet Chaser Kanban boards — a task leaving a Send to Billing column on the Dispatch board and appearing on the Billing board Transfer: Hand a Job to the Next Team Without Re-Typing It
Work doesn’t stop at one team. Transfer in Fleet Chaser hands a task from one workflow to another in a single move, keeping every product, attachment, and activity-log entry attached. No re-typing, no lost history.
Fleet Chaser QR code in a scan frame — scan a vehicle to start its inspection QR Codes Are Live — Scan a Vehicle, Start Inspecting
QR Codes are live in Fleet Chaser. Drivers scan a sticker on any vehicle to jump straight into the right inspection — no searching, no typing — and managers link a code to a vehicle right from the Console in seconds.
A Fleet Chaser task card moving itself from the Backlog column onto the active dispatch board Schedule Automation: Let Tomorrow's Jobs Show Up on Their Own
Most dispatchers still drag tomorrow's jobs onto the board every morning. Schedule Automation removes the ritual — set a rule on a workflow once, and planned tasks promote themselves onto the active board when their start time is near. It reacts when plans change, and you can still promote any job by hand in one click.
Last activity Introducing Last Activity View
The last activity view is already in your account. This feature enables you to instantly view info on trucks’ activity in certain locations. No need to search info on the last activity manually: it will be displayed neatly right next to each location’s name. Stay updated and have a nice day ahead!
Keep Your Drivers And Assets Safe with Dash Cameras Keep Your Drivers And Assets Safe with Dash Cameras
The most critical components of a fleet are the drivers and the vehicles. It is important that good driving behavior is monitored and encouraged, and fleets are kept safe.. Dash cameras make it possible to catch irresponsible driving early, provide concrete evidence in the event of an accident, and, most importantly, avoid them.
A construction dispatcher juggling back-to-back phone calls beside the Fleet Chaser live map showing the whole crew at a glance Why Your Dispatchers Lose 2 Hours a Day to Phone Calls
A construction dispatcher fields the same four calls all day — where are you, did you finish, when's the truck coming, which site. None are emergencies, but together they burn about two hours. Here's where the time goes — and the first call to move off the phone.