22-10-2010, 12:29 | #11 |
Shoes, Boobs & Corsets
Join Date: Jul 2006
Location: The fastest town in Scotland
Posts: 1,882
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The cab probably would, not entirely sure about the crane at the back. Hard to tell from the picture, even so..... doh!
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22-10-2010, 13:14 | #12 |
Rocket Fuel
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Adrift in the Orca
Posts: 6,845
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I stood and watched an artic inch its way under a bridge off one of the industrial estates in Peterborough. He pulled up, looked, inched forward, stopped, leaned out the window of the cab, inched forward, stopped, looked out....etc
It took him about 15 minutes. If he'd gone round the long way it'd have taken about 5.
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22-10-2010, 22:25 | #13 |
Preparing more tumbleweed
Join Date: Jun 2006
Location: Hawaii
Posts: 6,038
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Here's a stunning suggestion. Stick a solid item same height clearance as the bridge in advance of it by maybe a couple of hundred yards. That way if some stupid tosser thinks their vehicle will get under the bridge they end up hitting something non-critical.
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23-10-2010, 01:34 | #14 |
Dirteh Kitteh
Join Date: Jan 2007
Location: Hiding out in Mormon Country
Posts: 1,629
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I wish I'd gotten a picture of the dumbass last year who tried to take a low rider flat bed across a set of railroad tracks. Wouldn't have been such a bad deal except they were raised tracks. The cab went up the short hill, crossed the tracks and went down the other side. The trailer wheels hadn't gotten to the hill yet when the under side of the trailer lowered down onto the tracks.
About five hours later they'd stopped the train coming, backed it onto a side track and brought in a rail based crane to lift the trailer up...
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