Ding ding ding, winner winner chicken dinner. I drove 70 miles and about one mile from the job site, I tapped on the trailer brakes and the “stretch” trailer opened up about 2 feet and knocked the boom end section off the dunnage. I did my trailer pull brake check (tug) a few times from the shipper and all was fine. Whoever had this trailer prior to me must off stretch it and didn’t lock it all the way. However, at the end, it falls on me “if” something would have gone wrong. Luckily all went well, no damage. I guarantee you, this will never happened again. I’ve pulled plenty of stretch trailers and have always checked the pins, but this is a newer one. Like the saying goes, “You learned something new everyday”.
It’s sort of hard to tell, but I had a safety chain on the rear pulling it backwards.
Post flatbed load photos here V2.0
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by leftlanetruckin, Feb 18, 2014.
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@Diesel Dave many many moons ago whenever we’d rent a crane from this one particular company (that no longer exists)
Anyways, the owner was always giving us grief for using chains on his boom sections. This was back when I only threw chain (no straps). He would give us rubber pads to protect his booms.
Also, the old style stretch trailers had the hoses down the side that had to be disconnected along a manual handle for releasing the pins. Then they started using air for the pins as opposed to the handle. The air pins were a little more difficult to make sure that they were locked. The hoses would get torn off ALL the time when the pins weren’t locked correctly
I delivered a load of structural to Kodak in Rochester once. After driving two hundred some miles without a problem.I got empty and went to pull out and doesn’t the trailer begin to open tearing the hoses off… the load was enough to hold the trailer together -
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Some manufacturers do have small safety pins that can be put in on each side of the trailer. Those are usually on the trailers where the pins go from outside to in. The manufacturers that have the pins on the inside going out don’t have any safety pins.
The old ones that had a manual handle, I was taught to always disconnect the hoses first before moving the handle…and vice versa…lock the handle first before re-connecting the hosesLast edited: Oct 5, 2023
FerrissWheel, cke, beastr123 and 5 others Thank this.
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