Don't be surprised, I can read signs and I do manage my fatigue and I am on guard when approaching a low bridge. Let's face it there are a lot of cowboys in the trucking industry and I think they only have themselves to blame if they hit the top of the tunnel. You can't say "oh dear, I was tired and I lost concentration". Fatigue management was put there in the heavy vehicle industry for a reason and if somebody exceeds his/her allotted hours behind the wheel they are cheating their log book and deserve the full force of the law!! If they can't do a simple thing like judge the distance between the height of their vehicle and the bridge they are going under they should not be driving. They are putting other road users lives at risk!!:mad:
Here is an extreme case of a cowboy truckdriver, who knew his brakes were faulty when he drove the truck,( it was proven in the subsequent court case) finished up killing somebody, he copped a jail sentence over this and I remember the woman's son being interviewed on TV in tears!!
Runaway truck missed many by centimetres - National - www.smh.com.au
My main point is,if a truckie makes a mistake of any sort, other road users are put at risk. It's not a car he/she is driving it's a heavy vehicle weighing anything from 10tonnes upwards.

