0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Also, I believe the Canadian trailers were some of the first dry vans and reefers with tridem (tri-axle) trailers. At least I remember a friend telling me that.
The first time I remember seeing Canadian trucks in Idaho was in the 1990s. Possibly after NAFTA?Also, I believe the Canadian trailers were some of the first dry vans and reefers with tridem (tri-axle) trailers. At least I remember a friend telling me that.
The Railwire is not your personal army.
bman: One of the best truck pictures I ever saw was years ago, and just the opposite of your story. Someone was loading a flatbed with rolls of roofing paper, using a forklift with a "roll clamp", from a dock. They started at the front, naturally, loading towards the rear, and after getting enough weight ahead of the dolly, when the forklift backed off the trailer, the front end dropped to the ground. That sent the rear up in the air, and since the forklift was on the dock, there was no way to get it onto the trailer to unload it. It probably could have been unloaded from the side, while sitting at an angle, using a clamp, but instead they got a big wrecker, hoisted the front end up, and held it with blocking long enough to load the trailer. Then, the blocking was removed, and a tractor attached.I suspect that, the next time, they left the tractor attached while loading the trailer!The factory I work at has clamps at the loading bays that fit into the trailer bumpers. They both lock the trailer to the dock, and prevent the rear from dropping when the forklift drives in. Those were added when they rebuilt the dock area shortly after I started working there. I wonder if they had an incident similar to yours before my time?