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True Blue Aussie Truck Driver Slang 101

As a former British colony, Australia is one of the largest English-speaking nations in the southern hemisphere. For hundreds of years, Aussies have been shortening words that are too bothering to utter.

Us Aussies have customized our terminologies about everything under the sun. So, regardless of who you are or where you are from, there are bound to be a few words that you won’t understand when speaking to an operator. Here’s a simple guide to what you will hear on the road.

A-Z of Aussie driving slang

  • Anchors: Brakes
  • Bingle: A (small) road accident
  • Bog Standard: Basic standard equipment or specification, without upgrades or modifications
  • Booze Bus: Random breath test unit
  • Carby: Carburetor
  • Clocked: Caught speeding
  • Cow Snatcher: Bull-bars
  • Hairdryer: Stationery police radar gun
  • Hairdresser’s car: Small, often convertible car that is more about looks than performance
  • Hoon: Dangerous driver
  • Juice: Fuel
  • K: Kilometer(s)
  • Loud Pedal: Accelerator
  • Mods: Modifications
  • Rego: Vehicle registration
  • Roo catcher: Bull-bars
  • Rubber: Tyres
  • Servo: service station
  • Shopping Trolley: Small hatchback car
  • Slush Box: Automatic transmission
  • Spanner monkey: Mechanic
  • Stack: Car crash
  • Speedo: Speedometer
  • Tar: Asphalt Road surface
  • Temporary Australian: Motorcycle rider
  • Tiller: Steering wheel
  • Ute: utility vehicle, pickup style vehicle

And there’s more.

  • Anteater: Kenworth T604 because of the aerodynamic design
  • Bobtail: A prime mover without a trailer
  • Bog Cog: A very low gear
  • Bogie Drive: A truck with two or more drive axles at the back with differentials coupled with a jack
  • Camera Car: Highway Patrol Police Car about the onboard video camera set up
  • Candy Car: Highway Patrol Police Car usually with high-visibility Police decals
  • Diff: The differential that couples the drive shaft to half-shafts connected to the rear driving wheels
  • Disco Tin: High-visibility police car
  • Disco Whistle: Police car siren
  • Dolly: A unit made up of a turntable, drawbar and axle group that enables a dog trailer to be attached to a semi-trailer or the weight over an oversize load to be spread over more wheels
  • Dog Box: A sleeper box behind the cab or a Police Paddy Wagon
  • Dog Trailer: A trailer that can be attached to a semi-trailer
  • Double Bubble: Old style highway patrol cars still used in some country areas that had a pair of blue rotating lights on the roof before strobe bars were introduced
  • Double One: Marked highway patrol Car
  • Evil Kinevil: Highway patrol motorcycle
  • Flash for Cash: Speed or red-light camera
  • Hauling Unit: A prime mover
  • Jinker: A trailer to transport long logs
  • Kingpin: A pin that locks a semi-trailer into a prime mover’s turntable
  • Landing Gear: The retractable legs used to support a semi-trailer when not coupled to a truck
  • Live Load: A load that cannot be secured completely such as liquids, livestock, hanging meat, or earthmoving equipment with pneumatic tyres
  • Locker: Locked differential
  • Pig Trailer: A trailer with a non-steerable axle group near the middle
  • Pogo Stick: A pole behind the cab that holds trailer brake hoses and electrical connections
  • Reefer: An insulated, refrigerated dry freight container
  • Tarp: Short for tarpaulin, a cover to protect loads from rain or dust
  • Tug: A truck, particularly one used for shunting

We hope this list will help you decipher the lingo of the crazy Australian guys and gals right round Australia.