CSA
Violation code

393.23PT

All required lamps on towed vehicle inoperative due to no electrical connection

Vehicle Maintenance2Non-OOS· SMS Appendix A v3.20

393.23PT is a Clearance Identification Lamps/Other violation under 49 CFR §393.23PT. It falls in the Vehicle Maintenance BASIC with a severity weight of 2/10. Nationally it was cited 13,072 times in the last five years, with an OOS rate of 94.8%.

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National roadside inspection stats

as of 6/20/2026

Inspections

13,009

that found this code

Violations

13,072

total written

OOS rate

94.8%

12,396 OOS

Source: FMCSA roadside inspection data (last 5 years). The OOS rate is the share of these violations that led the officer to mark the driver or vehicle out of service.

Violation group
Clearance Identification Lamps/Other
Regulation §
393.23PT
Severity weight
2
Used in SMS
Yes
Status
Active
Updated
6/20/2026

Last updated June 2026

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Notes

DSMS: Y | Comment: Added in 3.0.4 | Footnote: This violation took effect in SMS as of August 28, 2015.
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Challenging 393.23PT through FMCSA DataQs

If this violation was written incorrectly, here are the angles trucking-safety managers use to contest it. Playbook: Vehicle Maintenance (general).

Common ways to challenge this code

  • Pre-trip inspection showed compliant brakes

    The driver's pre-trip DVIR documented compliant brake adjustment and operation. The cited defect arose en route or was misclassified at roadside.

    Evidence that wins

    • Driver Vehicle Inspection Report (DVIR) from that date
    • Repair invoice or shop record
    • Post-citation re-inspection certificate (clean)
  • Momentary failure exception (§393.9)

    The required lamp was inoperative only momentarily due to vibration, temperature, or similar transient cause — explicitly exempted under §393.9.

    Evidence that wins

    • Photograph showing the lamp operable before / after the stop
    • Repair invoice if a fuse or bulb was replaced
  • Tread measurement disputed

    The tread depth measurement was taken at a worn point that is not representative, contrary to NHTSA/FMCSA measurement standards.

    Evidence that wins

    • Independent tread gauge reading from same tire (multiple positions)
    • Photograph of the tire with a reference scale
  • Documented maintenance schedule disproves the defect

    Carrier's periodic-inspection records show the cited defect could not reasonably have existed at the time of inspection.

    Evidence that wins

    • Periodic inspection certificate (§396.17)
    • Maintenance work order proximate to inspection date

Common pitfalls — avoid these

  • DataQs cannot remove a violation simply because the defect was repaired after the stop

More codes in Vehicle Maintenance

Same BASIC category — ranked by national citation volume

View all Vehicle Maintenance codes

Other Clearance Identification Lamps/Other codes

Codes under the same FMCSA violation group

Frequently asked questions about 393.23PT

What does violation 393.23PT mean?

393.23PT is the FMCSA roadside-inspection violation code for "All required lamps on towed vehicle inoperative due to no electrical connection", part of the Clearance Identification Lamps/Other group, cited under 49 CFR §393.23PT.

What BASIC does 393.23PT affect?

393.23PT falls under the Vehicle Maintenance BASIC in the FMCSA Safety Measurement System (SMS).

What is the CSA severity weight of 393.23PT?

393.23PT carries a severity weight of 2 out of 10. Higher weights indicate violations more closely tied to crash risk, and they count more toward a carrier's Vehicle Maintenance score.

Is 393.23PT an out-of-service (OOS) violation?

No. 393.23PT is not an out-of-service violation, so on its own it does not trigger an out-of-service order at the roadside.

How many CSA points does 393.23PT add to a carrier's score?

The point contribution of 393.23PT depends on its severity weight (2/10) multiplied by a time weight of 3, 2, or 1 based on how recent the inspection is. You can calculate the exact contribution with the CSA points calculator.

Can 393.23PT be challenged through DataQs?

Yes. If you believe 393.23PT was recorded in error, you can file a Request for Data Review (RDR) through the FMCSA DataQs system with supporting evidence. A successful challenge can remove or correct the violation on your record.

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