We are talking about a linesman here and I suspect that his tools were far more mundane than you generator simulator is and would weigh considerably more.
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Almost every road around here has “Road Subject to Flooding” signs...
If you find water in them you’ve experienced a 1 in 50 yr event... however, when they are full it’s usually 1.5 to 2mtrs deep [emoji6]
The tyre squealing - even the best ABS equipped vehicles screech and smoke (reduced) under full braking..
Where's Clarkson, May and Hammond. They'd drive that out of there. :Rolling::Rolling::Rolling:
What if he'd taken his foot off the brake to get traction, whack it in to 4 and power through![bigrolf]
A lot of armchair experts here. [wink11] His biggest mistake was driving a HiLux. [biggrin]
In typical Road Authority/Council butt covering style, the boy who cried wolf syndrome comes into play.
I recall the first time I crossed the Gilbert. Westbound in a triple roadtrain, after passing dozens of Narrow Causeway and Road Subject To Flooding signs in the previous 100 k, with no flooding and 12 metres width between the guideposts, it was hard to take the the signage seriously. I crested the dogleg approach at 90ish kph and was shocked to see 100 metres of high kerbed causeway, above the dry creek bed. :eek2:
So apart from you fellows who never drive faster than 40 kph, it could have happened to any one of you.[bigsad]
I guess when you're faced with two options ...
EEvo's suggestion
https://youtu.be/jWnH30yiyQ4