My house is on a residential street, 25mph speed limit. One lost trucker knocked down the power line last year, nobody even bothered to search for him. Utility company said the wires probably just sag overtime and that's probably why the truck hit it.
So who's at fault when hitting power lines sagging to low?
Discussion in 'Ask An Owner Operator' started by 86scotty, May 12, 2025.
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flood, Flat Earth Trucker, Siinman and 2 others Thank this.
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You're golden! Keep rolling.
mjd4277, Siinman, silverspur and 2 others Thank this. -
Not your fault, as you’re not responsible for a utility company failure. Say nothing. Delete this thread.
mjd4277, Siinman, Walk Among Us and 3 others Thank this. -
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Unlikely but not a chance id take personally....FloridaRetired, gentleroger, Siinman and 5 others Thank this. -
I'm not really into shirking responsibility if it puts others at risk. That said,If a transformer had blown or a pole went down I would've stopped immediately and dealt with the consequences.
Where this happened I'm not really worried about cameras.
Yeah, I made my choice and took a chance and it's water under the bridge now. I'll let the thread stand.Sirscrapntruckalot, Siinman, Kyle G. and 5 others Thank this. -
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If this happened in Michigan, the utilities are on the hook for damages below 18 feet by law FOR POWER LINESm all others it is 15.5. While the NESC standard is 15.5 feet, and I think all states have a minimum 15.5 feet from the highest point of the road surface to the lowest point of the wire for everything.
I had a driver who snagged a fiber line being put up on a pole across a road, and it looked like it was high enough, but it wasn't. So he snagged the wire, ripped down the pully and took the wire for a ride for a few miles before he saw the crap that he yanked down. The company doing the install work tried to recoup the loses but it didn't work, once they were told that they were doing an illegal install, that was it.wis bang, Siinman, D.Tibbitt and 1 other person Thank this. -
Keep going and pretend that you didn't see it but call it in on your anonymous second burner phone as a bystander in the interest of public safety. You don't want some Amish kid to ride by on his bicycle to touch it and get cooked. It has happened.
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Very doubtful it was power line..,they’re the top wires 18’ft statutory in most places….most likely phone cable etc
Besides if you actually tore out power lines you’d have know it..,typically all hell breaks loose when they break etc
Roll on
Not your problemwore out, Siinman, D.Tibbitt and 1 other person Thank this.
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