True but a poster just mentioned that trucks who travel in teams are exempt or something like that from this rule. Like NASCAR, etc...
Property-carrying drivers
11-hour driving limit: Drivers may drive a maximum of 11 hours each day, after 10 consecutive hours of off-duty time.
14-hour limit: Drivers may not drive beyond the 14th consecutive hour after coming on duty each day, following 10 consecutive hours of off-duty time. Off-duty time during the 14 hours does not extend the 14-hour period.
Rest breaks: A driver may not drive more than eight hours without taking a 30-minute break, either off-duty or in the sleeper berth. Drivers need to be aware that this does not mean they have to take only one 30-minute break in the 11-hour driving limit. For example, if a driver begins his or her shift and takes a 30-minute break after two hours of driving, he or she would have to take another 30-minute break before reaching the 11-hour maximum of driving time that day. Plan your break carefully.
Sleeper berth provision: Drivers using the sleeper berth provision must take at least eight consecutive hours in the sleeper berth, plus a separate two consecutive hours either in the sleeper berth, off duty or any combination of the two.
34-hour restart: (This has possibly generated the most questions and confusion concerning the HOS rules.) A driver may not drive after 60/70 hours on duty in 7/8 consecutive days. At that point, a driver may restart the 7/8 consecutive day period after taking 34 or more consecutive hours off duty, which includes two periods from 1 a.m. to 5 a.m. home terminal time. The 34-hour restart may be used only once each week and the restart period begins 168 hours from the beginning of the previous restart. (I will talk more about this below.) Its important to remember that while your ability to use multiple restarts in your work week to reset available work hours to 70 has been limited, many drivers will find that using the old recap system to account for hours used will still leave you with time to drive within the 70 maximum hours permissible in an 8-day window. Since the new rule limits you to using the restart once in 7 days, you may be better off not using a two-day weekend at home for your restart, instead preserving its use for when you are away from home. Remember: If you were using two restarts each week under the previous rule to simply restart your 70 hour clock, it is a rare circumstance where you could have been exhausting the available 70 hours in 8 days.