Upon arrival at the delivery spot, which is the large gravel area I didn’t think the Conestoga trailer would make it across the culvert bridge. After getting out and over, analyzing the situation and decided that the ditch wasn’t too steep on either side and took that instead.
I took it nice and slow over the curb and then through the ditch, I also locked the differentials just in case.
another day, another adventure
I crossed the ditch instead of the tiny culvert bridge
Discussion in 'Questions From New Drivers' started by Nahbrown, Nov 8, 2023.
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Got lucky on that one
Dave_in_AZ, Oxbow, Magoo1968 and 6 others Thank this. -
You did get a big hand of luck on this one. That ground was solid, not going to be like that every time.Jubal Early Times, Oxbow, SoulScream84 and 8 others Thank this. -
Grass is bad, never drive on grass if you can help it.RockinChair, Oxbow, Nahbrown and 1 other person Thank this. -
I saw a flatbed go into a construction site once and he wasn’t so lucky. That said, I was still impressed. His trailer was #### near perpendicular to the ground and the load was still secured on the deck tighter than a snare drum. Hadn’t moved an inch.
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There was no way I was going to make that turn onto the culvert bridge to get to the gravel.
That option was out.
All the other above posts concerned with me driving on the grass, I get it. This is why I post here. I walked it. It was dry and hard but you’re right you never know what’s going on below the surface
I should’ve just stayed on the pavement and made them unload me from there.
Again, thank you to everyone because this is why us new drivers come here.Kyle G., blairandgretchen, Oxbow and 2 others Thank this. -
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When i got my cdl, a salty old crusty driver told me that there’s places we’re not meant to go, being safe is a mindset, and accidents aren’t accidents when big trucks are involved.
In 3 years, I’ve refused 1 load because i wasn’t comfortable with the exit strategy getting out of that station…backing out onto US41 in Calhoun GA. The only approach to the drops is nose in, otherwise the drops are underneath the truck. (Gas hauler)
My read of it was i would need cops to block traffic for me to exit safely, as there’s absolutely no way I’m backing a fuel tanker across 4 lanes of highway.
This time you were extremely lucky.
The ground was firm enough to support you, there was no underground infrastructure you damaged, like pipes or tanks, and you came out okay.
I would caution you against doing it again.
Lightning rarely strikes twice, and that one was your freebie.
Keep yourself safe, protect your equipment, and protect your name with the client.
Those photos indicate to me a very difficult situation that would be best served by a straight truck than a tractor trailer.
While i don’t know how a spread axle flatbed bends while backing, i could see pulling into the curve and backing up the drive lane.
Exit would be backing out onto the curve to pull out to the bottom of the photo.
Again, I’m making assumptions that may not be wisest, or accurate, just stating observations.
Above all, be safe out there my friend.
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