To think, I used to cart bags of cement, fertiliser, horse and dog food, flour, sugar, etc, etc on a road train throughout Central and northern Qld, over mostly gravel (if you were lucky) or blacksoil tracks, through creekbeds and up and down jumpups, with nothing but a few ropes (not even nylon) and a tarp holding them on!
Biggest problem as I see it, is the huge number of so-called truck drivers out there who got their licence at so-called testing facilities, jump into a 600 HP Kenworth and hit the highways with their shiny chrome and dazzling led lights. When the inevitable happens and it all turns to poo, the first thing that pops out of their mouth is "the load shifted, Officer!" Equally young and inexperienced copper puts that in his report, and later on some desk-polisher puts out a report on the vast number of heavy vehicle accidents involving "shifting loads". Recommendation - we need a Load Restraint Guide. End result - we have a guide, now we can enforce compliance! After hassling truckies for a few years, some bright young thing realized what a huge revenue raiser there could be in checking car trailers and utes at the tip on Saturday morning.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using AULRO mobile app
-----
You have the right to remain silent. Anything you say will be misquoted, then used against you.
-----
1999 Disco TD5 ("Bluey")
1996 Disco 300 TDi ("Slo-Mo")
1995 P38A 4.6 HSE ("The Limo")
1966 No 5 Trailer (ARN 173 075) soon to be camper
-----
Bookmarks