The title says it. Two truck drivers died in this one. I had to take a detour while PennDOT was still cleaning up the mess.
http://www.centredaily.com/news/local/community/bellefonte/article125922519.html
The Barr-Nunn International ProStar tractor is smashed in like a pop can.
Fatal Chain Collision Crash-I-80 Eastbound in Pennsylvania,Traffic Detoured
Discussion in 'Trucking Accidents' started by mjd4277, Jan 12, 2017.
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There are no excuses for everything I saw on 80 in PA on tuesday night/Wednesday morning. The speed limit is 45 everytime it snows or ices which is honestly still too fast for alot of parts. Electronic signs every 15 miles saying so. Ok so speed limits dont mean much to some I guess, but you would hope that driving past a dozen separate truck wrecks might turn the light bulb on for some of these drivers. Nope. And I might be underselling that dozen. There was carnage it seemed like every few miles along with trucks stuck on the iced up hills after sitting in accident traffic. It was a nasty night.
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I wonder how many of those drivers come from states with no snow driving experience.
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I got off exit 120 and was going 30 down the hill before the exit that night. been at this long enough to know when to get off the road.
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...more likely from drivers who come from snow states that ain't ever seen ICE! I remember heading to Chicago a few years back. Usually, when they get "winter weather" it starts as snow and just snows. This one year, they got an ice storm on Friday night that left people wrecking all over the place. They just weren't used to the roads being THAT slick, especially when it "only" looked a little wet...so they were trying to drive like they would in the rain, when they needed to drive with more caution than if it were snowing. It is just something they don't see up there.Lepton1 Thanks this.
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It's unreal seeing the massive truck wrecks after a major winter storm.
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Trust me, they've seen ice before-they've just forgotten how to drive appropriately to the changing weather conditions. Having lived in Northern Illinois most of my life,sometimes Chicagoland can literally get four seasons in one day,five if you count construction.Lepton1 Thanks this.
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