I remember the Cherry Valley bridge in Garden City. When I was a kid I went to the school right next to the bridge and watched a too high truck try to get under it. About half the roof got peeled off the truck before it stuck. Lot of laffs over that.
SealBook27 Any class D driver is legally permitted to drive a straight truck as long as its GVWR is no more than 26,000 lbs. That means someone's grandmother could be driving a rental truck out there. If the height is marked on the truck body, how do you know it is accurate? With no load, the rear of the body probably will be slightly higher than the front. I once knocked a overhead garage door off its track while a co-worker watched the front to check the clearance. And how do you know the road wasn't repaved since they put up the clearance sign? They are definitely not accurate.
Any class D driver is legally permitted to drive a straight truck as long as its GVWR is no more than 26,000 lbs. That means someone's grandmother could be driving a rental truck out there.
If the height is marked on the truck body, how do you know it is accurate? With no load, the rear of the body probably will be slightly higher than the front. I once knocked a overhead garage door off its track while a co-worker watched the front to check the clearance.
And how do you know the road wasn't repaved since they put up the clearance sign? They are definitely not accurate.
Have you been to Durham? The signs are accurate and the roads not been repaved.
A good many companies with their own fleets rent vehicles to make up for equipment shortages. It's not all rank amateurs who don't know a box truck from a box of crackers.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
I have not rented all that many trucks, but those that I have had the box height clearly visible in the rear view mirrors... It was printed backward on the front corner of the box at a height such that it would be visible (and readable) in the mirrors. And I still managed to whack a "guard shack" roof overhang because the shack itself was mislabeled as to its height by 3 inches.
Semper Vaporo
Pkgs.
In the videos I've seen of trucks hitting this bridge, most of them are rentals (Ryder, U-Haul, Penske, etc.) The one time I rented a truck, there was no indication anywhere within the cab, and the rental agency never mentioned the height of the box body.
The 11 ft 8 bridge in Durham NC has a very heavy steel I- beam mounted about 8 ft ahead of the bridge. That is what the trucks are hitting, not the actual bridge. About 10 years ago I was returning to Charlotte on #79 when the bridge was hit. We were delayed 4+hours waiting on a NS bridge inspector to come check it. The I-beam was installed about 6 months later, paid for by NCDOT.
As for warning signs there are about a dozen of them, on both sides of the street, on all the streets approaching the bridge, in addition to the flashing lights at the bridge. There is no excuse for the morons to hit it.
Finally, if you go to YouTube and search there a number of mash-up videos of the bridge better then the one above. Some are pretty funny in their own way.
A bridge strike in Ireland about 30 years ago caused the bridge to shift. A passenger train was derailed resulting in 5 deaths. That 11 foot 8 bridge in the video is certainly well secured, but if there was a derailment, you would prefer not to be too close to the aftermath, judging by the speed of the freight train passing over it.
Michael J Walsh, Dublin, Ireland.
http://www.odometer.com/lifestyle/5837/bridge-meets-truck-23-not-so-glamorous-tales-of-unrequited-love#slide/0
Never too old to have a happy childhood!
mudchicken denveroutlaws06 the worst underpass for trucks in CO. 11'4 under the BNSF brush Sub Denver,CO. and yes those black marks are from trucks trying to make it underneath. one day i know it will happen a train drailing cause a truck messing up that bridge cant image if its a loaded oil train involved. https://goo.gl/maps/Co94w Seems to have missed the other "mouseholes" on the same ex-CB&Q line at the Denver Western Stockyards (S-SW) and at Sand Creek Junction (60th Ave) (N-NE). Local jurisdiction that Outlaw is showing is a political mess. Plan & profile bad geometry plus a high water table makes for an expensive fix. At least the cemetery is close by , but old Riverside is full and good luck moving the graves. (There is a section corner that falls in Riverside at the base of a headstone. The sight of surveyors running around in there, shovel in hand, looking for the aliquot corner - causes some raised eyebrows until they realize what surveyors are looking for.) MC, how often do surveyors visit the grave? Is there any way the marker can be raised so shovels will not be needed to find it? I presume it is not a geodetic survey marker. CB&Q built a lot of these in the 1920's and 1930's.
denveroutlaws06 the worst underpass for trucks in CO. 11'4 under the BNSF brush Sub Denver,CO. and yes those black marks are from trucks trying to make it underneath. one day i know it will happen a train drailing cause a truck messing up that bridge cant image if its a loaded oil train involved. https://goo.gl/maps/Co94w
the worst underpass for trucks in CO. 11'4 under the BNSF brush Sub Denver,CO. and yes those black marks are from trucks trying to make it underneath. one day i know it will happen a train drailing cause a truck messing up that bridge cant image if its a loaded oil train involved.
https://goo.gl/maps/Co94w
Seems to have missed the other "mouseholes" on the same ex-CB&Q line at the Denver Western Stockyards (S-SW) and at Sand Creek Junction (60th Ave) (N-NE). Local jurisdiction that Outlaw is showing is a political mess. Plan & profile bad geometry plus a high water table makes for an expensive fix. At least the cemetery is close by , but old Riverside is full and good luck moving the graves.
(There is a section corner that falls in Riverside at the base of a headstone. The sight of surveyors running around in there, shovel in hand, looking for the aliquot corner - causes some raised eyebrows until they realize what surveyors are looking for.) MC, how often do surveyors visit the grave? Is there any way the marker can be raised so shovels will not be needed to find it? I presume it is not a geodetic survey marker.
CB&Q built a lot of these in the 1920's and 1930's.
Johnny
BroadwayLion This bridge is monitored by a web cam 24/7. At 11 foot 8 it is taller than yours, but lots of interesting action shots. There *is* a guard beam ahead of the bridge installed by the railroad to prevent strikes on their infrastructure. There *are* detectors ahead of the bridge, and trucks must turn either right or left, or face the "can Opener". Some choose the can opener. ROAR
This bridge is monitored by a web cam 24/7. At 11 foot 8 it is taller than yours, but lots of interesting action shots. There *is* a guard beam ahead of the bridge installed by the railroad to prevent strikes on their infrastructure. There *are* detectors ahead of the bridge, and trucks must turn either right or left, or face the "can Opener".
Some choose the can opener.
ROAR
Same bridge I posted the video of earlier in the thread.
The Route of the Broadway Lion The Largest Subway Layout in North Dakota.
Here there be cats. LIONS with CAMERAS
(There is a section corner that falls in Riverside at the base of a headstone. The sight of surveyors running around in there, shovel in hand, looking for the aliquot corner - causes some raised eyebrows until they realize what surveyors are looking for.)
But not that bridge. It reminds me of a mini-version of Joh Koh's Clinton St. Viaduct - "still undefeated". The exposed face is part of a thick solid concrete deck that runs about 30 ft. to the other side, and has a fairly short span, so it's almost like a giant cement block. And it was built 'back in the day', when no one shorted on the amount of cement in the concrete (which slowly gains strength over time). The curves limit the approach speed, so the trucks may chip at it, and even take out some bigger pieces, but they ain't never gonna knock it down.
- Paul North.
Deggesty denveroutlaws06 the worst underpass for trucks in CO. 11'4 under the BNSF brush Sub Denver,CO. and yes those black marks are from trucks trying to make it underneath. one day i know it will happen a train drailing cause a truck messing up that bridge cant image if its a loaded oil train involved. https://goo.gl/maps/Co94w The underpass is given black marks for not letting trucks go under it?
The underpass is given black marks for not letting trucks go under it?
Click "through" the bridge and then turn around and look at the other end!!! NO "Black Marks" at all! It all comes off with the concrete!
Back before I-15/I-80 conglomeration in the Salt Lake City area was rebuilt just before the WInter Olympics, the was a sign on NB I-15 south of the 3300 South exit, warning drivers whose load was too high to go under the 2700 South (access to Roper Yard) overpass to exit at 3300 South. I did not hear of anyone's ignoring the warning.
Now that the Spaghetti Bowl (look at a map of the area, which includes Utah 201 to/from the west and a collector just east of I-15/I-80) has been built, the clearance is much better.
There was an incident on I-15, going south, north of the city a few years back when a high load was caught by a structure.
tree68I've seen locations that have some sort of sensing system for overheight trucks which triggers flashing lights. Probably uses lasers for the sensing
Then there was the tragedy in Texas yesterday where an apparently oversize load struck one of the concrete beams of a bridge under construction over I-35, knocked it down, and killed a passing driver.
Trooper "Hey, get your truck stuck under the bridge?"
Driver "No, I was delivering this bridge and I ran out of gas."
Bill Engvall
Or just install a very long chain saw bar at the right height to cut the top off of anything too tall before it reaches the bridge. Imagine its your first time on this road with lots of traffic,,, lots of signs,,, and your view of signs is blocked by "other" box trucks and tall vehicles around you and I can see a person missing those crucial signs. Also remember some jurisdictions "like" to write tickets and the fix to the road or bridge would cut into their bottom line.
Modeling the "Fargo Area Rapid Transit" in O scale 3 rail.
Norm48327And there's this little gem in Battle Creek, MI that snags the unwary. Bridge hasn't moved yet. Picture didn't show in the post. It's upton Ave. Clearance is 10'6".
I see your bridge and raise, er lower mine at Tilton Ave (8'6") on the Caltrain ROW in San Mateo, CA. There are several of these obsolete structures nearby and, unfortunately, local governments have been napping for decades WRT replacing them. Now that Caltrain ridership is booming it is costing us a fortune to build grade separations and other mitigations.
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Oversize truck hits bridge under construction over I-35
http://www.nbcdfw.com/traffic/stories/Bridge-Collapse-Reported-on-Interstate-35-in-Central-Texas-297675931.html
I've seen locations that have some sort of sensing system for overheight trucks which triggers flashing lights. Probably uses lasers for the sensing.
The fact that the lights aren't on all of the time might prevent the complacency of drivers who regularly run the routes.
Paul_D_North_Jr Glad you enjoyed that one, Johnny - I just had to share it ! Perhaps IDOT should install a truck version of the old railroad "tell-tale" - a series of vertical ropes or light chains hanging from a crossbar above the track that would 'tickle' a brakeman on the car tops to warn him of an impending low clearance bridge or tunnel, etc. See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tell-tale#Railroad - note the photo of one for trucks there, too ! http://trn.trains.com/railroads/abcs-of-railroading/2006/05/tell-tales http://www.american-rails.com/tell-tales.html In this instance, it would be a 'sacrificial' lightweight steel or wooden bar - kind of like a 'smashboard' at level railroad grade crossings - at the same height (or a wee bit lower) that would catch on the truck before the bridge, maybe break loose, and make all kinds of noise. I've seen some in advance of old wooden covered bridges around here to prevent them from being damaged by too-tall trucks. See: http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d/Concord_Covered_Bridge.jpg - Paul North.
Glad you enjoyed that one, Johnny - I just had to share it !
Perhaps IDOT should install a truck version of the old railroad "tell-tale" - a series of vertical ropes or light chains hanging from a crossbar above the track that would 'tickle' a brakeman on the car tops to warn him of an impending low clearance bridge or tunnel, etc. See:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tell-tale#Railroad - note the photo of one for trucks there, too !
http://trn.trains.com/railroads/abcs-of-railroading/2006/05/tell-tales
http://www.american-rails.com/tell-tales.html
In this instance, it would be a 'sacrificial' lightweight steel or wooden bar - kind of like a 'smashboard' at level railroad grade crossings - at the same height (or a wee bit lower) that would catch on the truck before the bridge, maybe break loose, and make all kinds of noise. I've seen some in advance of old wooden covered bridges around here to prevent them from being damaged by too-tall trucks. See:
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/7/7d/Concord_Covered_Bridge.jpg
Forget the "'sacrificial' lightweight steel or wooden bar". I suggest cinder blocks. Big ones.
Tom
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