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A semi truck has more electronic data than your car. Engine control modules, electronic logging devices, GPS units, and vehicle telematics record speed, braking, steering, hours of service, and the seconds before impact. In an Arizona truck crash, that data often decides the case — but only if it gets preserved before the trucking company overwrites it.
What the Engine Control Module Records
The engine control module (ECM) stores speed, braking force, steering angle, throttle position, and hard-acceleration events for the seconds and minutes before a crash. ECM data shows whether the driver braked late, never braked, or was speeding when the impact happened.
What the Electronic Logging Device Shows
Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration (FMCSA) rules require commercial trucks to use electronic logging devices that automatically record driving time. ELD data proves whether the driver violated hours-of-service rules — for example, driving past the 11-hour limit or skipping the required 30-minute break.
GPS and Telematics
Most modern trucks have fleet management systems that track GPS position, speed, and route. This data can confirm where the driver was, when they were there, and what speed they were traveling at every point.
How This Data Disappears
ECM data is volatile — it can be overwritten on a regular cycle, sometimes within days. ELD records are required to be retained for 6 months but trucking companies have been known to "lose" inconvenient data. GPS data lives on the fleet management server and may be purged on a schedule.
What Spoliation Letters Do
Within hours of a serious truck crash, your lawyer should send the trucking company a spoliation letter — a formal demand to preserve all electronic data, driver logs, maintenance records, and dispatch records. Failure to preserve after notice can lead to court sanctions and adverse inference instructions to the jury.
What This Means for Your Case
In Arizona truck cases, the side that secures the data first usually controls the narrative. We treat data preservation as the first step, not the second. Calling early matters.
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📞 Call 623-632-0959Frequently Asked Questions
How long does truck black box data last?
It depends on the truck and the data type. Engine control module data can be overwritten on a routine cycle, sometimes within days. ELD data is federally required to be retained 6 months but earlier disclosure should be requested immediately.
Can the trucking company refuse to give me the black box data?
Not after a proper preservation letter and discovery request. Once notified, they have a legal duty to preserve. Refusing or destroying data after notice can lead to court sanctions.
Who downloads the black box data?
Typically a qualified accident reconstruction expert or a forensic data analyst, with the trucking company present. The download must follow specific protocols to maintain evidentiary integrity.
Related guides
This article provides general information about Arizona law and is not legal advice. Every case is fact-specific.


