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"End of Life Vehicle and Metals Recycling Centre"

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  • Member since
    July 2006
  • 2,299 posts
Posted by Dave-the-Train on Monday, September 18, 2006 11:02 AM
 chutton01 wrote:
 Dave-the-Train wrote:
Still looks like a scrap yard to me... except the posh sign.

'End of Life Vehicle and Metals Recycling Centre' Challenge with host Robert Llewellyn? Doesn't sound right...
Actually, kind of miss that show, is it still playing in the UK - here in the US they mucked up the format, called it Junkyard Megawars, and then dumped it - shame, as it was quite entertaining when they just followed the UK 'Scrapheap challenge' format...


The police in the UK have also solved the untaxed and uninsured car (auto) question.  If it's on the road and not taxed and insured it gets lifted/towed straight to the crusher... doesn't matter what it is or who's it is... CRUNCH!  Plus fines and costs.

Sooo... if there's an abandoned new Jaguar or Mercedes on the road, they're gonna scrap it for UKP600 as opposed to auctioning it off for UKP10,000?

Riiiiightttt... Even John Prescott's not that stupid.

Not an abandoned car but a car being used without tax and insurance.  That gets crunched.  There's no price on the scrap value and absolutley no return to the owner.  So if you're daft enough to run a £10,000 car with no tax and no insurance you stand to lose your money... especially as they have registration reading cameras on major roads.  (Big brother could be watching you)  Talking of which... what odds would you suggest on JP???

Thanks for the truck turning info Ken Smile [:)]

  • Member since
    March 2016
  • 1,447 posts
Posted by Eriediamond on Sunday, September 17, 2006 4:51 PM
 Dave-the-Train wrote:


I asked the yard shunter at work and he reckoned that a straight turnaround with a cabover in an open space could be done in the vehicle length.  What he did come up with is that pulling forward out of an alley or warehouse door you would have to get at least half of the trailer out before starting to swing either way so as not to side-swipe the sides.  He said this was different from backing onto a dock which (with a right angle move) he reckoned could be done in the trailer length.  He also commented on tyre damage and wheels turning the wrong way round on a tight turn.

Tongue [:P]

The police in the UK have also solved the untaxed and uninsured car (auto) question.  If it's on the road and not taxed and insured it gets lifted/towed straight to the crusher... doesn't matter what it is or who's it is... CRUNCH!  Plus fines and costs.



From reading your post I take it your trying to figure how much room it will take to turn a truck around????  Maybe I can help and give you some idea here. I've been a driver of big rigs since 1958 and drove farm trucks and tractors years before that, but I don't claim to be an expert here. The space required to do a 180 degree turn would depend on a few factors such as the wheel base of the tractor and the trailer and the wheel location on the trailer plus how many axles it has and the spread of the tandems if it has tandem axles (distance between front and rear axles). Also the turning radius of the tractor has to factored in also. For all intents and purposes, figure a space one and a half times the lenth of the vechicle. As far as a tractor-trailer pulling out of a door or alley, half the trailer ain't going to cut it. The trailer wheels must be at or past the door before turning. I have seen rookies turn too short with loaded spread axle trailers and literaly pull the tires off the rims or break the bead and end up with flat tires. Hope this helps, Ken
  • Member since
    December 2001
  • 3,139 posts
Posted by chutton01 on Sunday, September 17, 2006 3:44 PM
 Dave-the-Train wrote:
Still looks like a scrap yard to me... except the posh sign.

'End of Life Vehicle and Metals Recycling Centre' Challenge with host Robert Llewellyn? Doesn't sound right...
Actually, kind of miss that show, is it still playing in the UK - here in the US they mucked up the format, called it Junkyard Megawars, and then dumped it - shame, as it was quite entertaining when they just followed the UK 'Scrapheap challenge' format...


The police in the UK have also solved the untaxed and uninsured car (auto) question.  If it's on the road and not taxed and insured it gets lifted/towed straight to the crusher... doesn't matter what it is or who's it is... CRUNCH!  Plus fines and costs.

Sooo... if there's an abandoned new Jaguar or Mercedes on the road, they're gonna scrap it for UKP600 as opposed to auctioning it off for UKP10,000?

Riiiiightttt... Even John Prescott's not that stupid.

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • 2,299 posts
"End of Life Vehicle and Metals Recycling Centre"
Posted by Dave-the-Train on Sunday, September 17, 2006 6:42 AM

That's what they call the junk yard on the way to where I work now...

Still looks like a scrap yard to me... except the posh sign.

Some of the noises as they squash and drop things would be interesting to model.

The recent scrapyard thread had moved on to turning circles for trucks... any chance of some more info please?  Sue, you helped some...

I asked the yard shunter at work and he reckoned that a straight turnaround with a cabover in an open space could be done in the vehicle length.  What he did come up with is that pulling forward out of an alley or warehouse door you would have to get at least half of the trailer out before starting to swing either way so as not to side-swipe the sides.  He said this was different from backing onto a dock which (with a right angle move) he reckoned could be done in the trailer length.  He also commented on tyre damage and wheels turning the wrong way round on a tight turn.

Tongue [:P]

The police in the UK have also solved the untaxed and uninsured car (auto) question.  If it's on the road and not taxed and insured it gets lifted/towed straight to the crusher... doesn't matter what it is or who's it is... CRUNCH!  Plus fines and costs.

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