Glossary
Direct Tiedown
A direct tiedown attaches to the cargo and to the vehicle to restrain cargo movement in a direction.
Plain-English Meaning
Direct tiedowns are common on equipment, vehicles, machinery, and loads with designated attachment points. The tiedown works by connecting the cargo to the trailer or vehicle structure.
The direction of restraint matters. A direct tiedown that is placed poorly may not control the movement path that creates the risk.
In day-to-day freight work, the safest use of the term is narrow and factual. Confirm the current rule, equipment rating, shipment condition, and company procedure before using any glossary definition for a live securement decision.
Watchouts
- Attachment points must be suitable.
- Accessories and movable parts may need separate attention.
- Do not mix up direct and indirect WLL credit without checking the rule.
Related Terms
Primary Sources / References
Last reviewed:
- FMCSA Cargo Securement Rules Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration · official · reliability: high
- 49 CFR Part 393 Subpart I - Protection Against Shifting and Falling Cargo Electronic Code of Federal Regulations · regulation · reliability: high