CB Slang / Road lanes
Granny Lane in trucking
Plain-English explanation
Granny Lane is CB shorthand for the right or slower lane on a highway. In day-to-day trucking, the word matters most when it changes an instruction, document, cost, appointment, or equipment choice.
CB slang is road shorthand. It can help with awareness, but dispatch notes, load paperwork, inspection records, and claims still need formal language.
Why it matters in trucking
Granny Lane is informal, but drivers still use phrases like this to pass quick information about traffic, lane problems, scale houses, and road hazards. It belongs on the radio, not in load paperwork or compliance records.
The value is speed and shared awareness. The limit is that slang should never replace exact times, locations, document names, or safety-critical instructions.
Example in real use
"Granny Lane" is the kind of lane shorthand a driver may hear while sorting out passing traffic, slow traffic, or restricted-lane movement.
Common mistakes or confusion
- Using "Granny Lane" without naming the lane, direction, or traffic condition behind it.
- Treating informal lane talk as a substitute for safe observation and posted signs.
- Assuming the phrase means the same thing in every state or traffic situation.
Related terms
Related guides
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Sources and last updated
Last updated: 2026-05-08