The Truckers’ Report flatbed Hall of Shame.
Discussion in 'Flatbed Trucking Forum' started by MACK E-6, Dec 11, 2017.
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tramm01, God prefers Diesels, jamespmack and 9 others Thank this.
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Last edited: Jun 8, 2023
God prefers Diesels, cke, CAXPT and 3 others Thank this. -
That is why a manual pin is better or inspecting the pin every time is important.God prefers Diesels, cke, Ruthless and 4 others Thank this. -
That was embarrassing enough.God prefers Diesels, beastr123, mtoo and 4 others Thank this. -
God prefers Diesels, cke, Feedman and 2 others Thank this.
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Stan hired on with us on a dedicated, home daily account. One morning he shows up as I'm manually disconnecting the batteries from a P3 so we can do a hard reset on the ecm and drive it over to Freightliner instead of having to get it towed. Stan is in awe that I know how to do it, I'm flabbergasted that he doesn't. Fast forward almost a year and I'm babysitting my 'young gentleman' as he couples/pretrips/slidetandems/etc. Stan comes in and hooks to his trailer, slides the tandems, pulls out to the left, makes a left at the end of the row, then another left to head to the shipping office to grab his paperwork. Stan cuts to the right to head back to the exit and the trailer drops.
Stan tries to claim "something broke". No, nothing broke, Stan just didn't do his job. February temperatures in Wisconsin are ripe for bad hooks, even with well maintained equipment. I scrapped enough grease out of his locking jaws to make a softball, tripped the jaws and dieseled them up and the truck coupled without a problem. He caused no real damage, so I read him the riot act without making anything official because when I make thing official it depresses the heck out of me and Stan is a good guy who f'd up.
My point to this long winded story is "just because you've been doing things since Christ was a Corporal doesn't mean you're good at what you do". I don't know exactly how an RGN should get attached, but I would guess that this idiot skipped a step, just like Stan skipped visually checking the locking jaws when he coupled.
The thing I don't understand is most of the steps that guys skip take NO TIME to complete. I made more than my fair share of mistakes my first 6 months, and I'm #### lucky that I was able to recover from those stupidities without assistance or tearing stuff up. I learned that doing things the 'company way' and doing things the 'fast way' were one and the same. My guess is that with either a hydraulic or mechanical neck there is a fool proof process to follow and this driver didn't follow it.God prefers Diesels, Gearjammin' Penguin, beastr123 and 4 others Thank this. -
Started singing this song when I saw this flatbed load
“Lean on me
When you're not strong
And I'll be your friend
I'll help you carry on...”God prefers Diesels, PPNLE, cke and 5 others Thank this. -
So, when unhooking after lowering the deck to the ground, you pull the safety and the hit the air valve to release the pin, which is not load bearing, and lower the stiff leg via hydraulics against the tractor frame to support the neck, disconnect the lies frm neck to deck, then drive away.
Just the reverse for hooking up. Since the big pin is not load bearing, the deck can be lifted without engaging the locking pin, and because air to the neck is charged throughout the process, once you connect the air cords from neck to deck you can drive away without engaging the locking pin.
My trailer is a 96. Newer trailers may have a some sort of safety plumbing for the air so that supply to the deck is not allowed until the lock pin is engaged, I'm not sure.
Getting a solid routine down and not getting in a hurry is pretty important!God prefers Diesels, CAXPT, exhausted379 and 8 others Thank this. -
D.Tibbitt, God prefers Diesels, cke and 5 others Thank this.
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What brand of trailer do you have, and how do you like it?D.Tibbitt, God prefers Diesels, PPNLE and 5 others Thank this.
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