to all end dump haulers...
Discussion in 'Tanker, Bulk and Dump Trucking Forum' started by leo319, Jan 25, 2012.
Page 301 of 351
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Tall Mike Thanks this.
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NightWind Thanks this.
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I do a lot of lurking on this forum but don't post anything really. Had this happen to me the other day and figured you guys would get a kick out of it. I've never used a dump trailer before but I had a small land clearing job I did last week where I hauled all the debris out with this trailer I rented. Hauled about 15 loads of stumps and brush on it with no issues. The place I was dumping was asphalt and completely flat so pretty hard to screw up. When I was done with the trailer the owner of the trailer asked me to pick up a load of wood chunks on my way back to their yard. When I got there he showed me where to dump, it was a bit sloped but seemed hard enough and I figured it being his trailer he wouldn't have me dumping somewhere I shouldn't be. I got the bed up about halfway and part of the load came out, I thought the rest was trying to follow but just held up by the first part of the load, so I pulled forward a few feet and over she went. In hindsight I should have just kept going up or maybe bumped the trailer down and back up, pulling forward was the wrong move. Also should have dumped on level ground obviously. Fortunately my truck is a 93 Mack I bought from Ritchie Bros for 6500$ so it didn't hurt all that bad that it's totaled. The trailer frame is ok, the body will need some serious work to get it functional again. Anyway this is a great example of what happens when you get too confident, and how dangerous this stuff can be when you don't know what you're doing. I should have picked a place that was more level to dump. I know a few guys who run dump trailers and I should have called them to get some pointers.
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I appreciate the honesty in your mistake, Ive been doing this a lot of years and can visibly see the lean in the pics, also with material like that you need to be aware that it doesn’t disperse when it hits the ground, once it’s out it doesn’t move, so standing it up more doesn’t do you any good, only presents the danger of going over more clear. As you stated, in that situation where you know there’s still quite a bit of material in there, set it down, pull up, dump what you can and repeat the process until empty, move around as well if need be to find a level spot. Sucks you had to learn these lessons the hard way, much respect though for not making any excuses.
Sons Hero, NightWind, motocross25 and 2 others Thank this. -
Yeah man not much else to do in that kinda situation but just admit your wrong and try better next time. I'm sure you professionals wouldn't get caught in a situation like that but hopefully somebody new can learn from this. And heck it's always cool to see some pictures of truck carnage right? Lol
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I'm glad you weren't hurt, @Con707904 . Equipment can always be repaired or replaced.
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